by mike-s » Fri May 01, 2009 2:22 pm
there are two types of circuits, chokes, and enricheners. They both do the same thing (that is modifying the fuel/air ratio) but do it from different approaches.
The choke is basically a plate that cuts across the front of the carb, massively restricting the quantity of air that can come in, and increasing the ratio of fuel to air inside the engine as the jetting for the fuel remains the same. The enrichener circuit is basically a secondary series of jetting that provides a secondary source of fuel in order to get the engine started up in a reasonably smooth manner.
The aim of both of these methods is to provide enough additional fuel so that even with the poor combustion achieved with the poorly atomised fuel, it has a hope in hell of firing up enough to run half evenly.
Both of these methods are able to be provided this extra fuel in a linear manner, meaning you can provide as much "extra fuel" as required by the engine to start off smoothly regardless of how warm/cold the engine is. Once it is running reasonably well and the revs start to rise slightly, then you can back off/disengage the choke totally.

If it hurts, you aren't doing it right.