
Now ensure the car is in neutral. Before starting the process I usually turn the engine slowly several times with the ignition off. I assume this squirts fresh oil onto the moving parts because it quickly reduces internal resistance. During this stage you can grip the handle as hard as you like. You should hear the slight wheeze of air being pushed into the cylinders.
Turn the ignition on and pull the choke out . Stand by the offside (driver's) headlight. Engage the starter dog by pushing the end of the handle into the bumper hole and jiggle the end around until it catches. There are two possible positions but I always start with the bar at it's lowest position. Curl your 8 fingers around the bar, but avoid gripping it tightly! At the same time keep the thumbs out of the way. Pull slightly against the bar with both hands (using the inside of the fingers) to get a grip. Now pull hard towards yourself and increasingly upwards to gain momentum. As it goes towards the top of the turn, allow the bar to be cradled by the top of the palms, before pushing away and downwards. From this point you are allowing the handle to maintain the circular motion whilst allowing it to continually slide around the semi-circle formed by the fingers and palm. By doing this a sudden kickback will merely brush the bar past the fingertips or palm.

For original style starting handles see Les's post below: