For those that attended EOM or followed the EOM thread, you may have read that I had a problem with my AE that necessitated a tow back to the hotel and a rental vehicle to get the bike home. Here's what went wrong.
The shift actuator is located on the left side of the bike, under the side panel, just above the Hard/Soft lever for the rear shock:
The bracket that holds the shift actuator to the rear subframe broke, leaving the actuator loose and therefore unable to function. Here is what it should look like, the bracket welded to the back side of the subframe:
Here is the broken weld along the bottom of the bracket. Note how much play is in the mechanism, such that I can push this way inside the frame to show the bottom of the bracket:
When this broke, it left me stuck in 3rd and I couldn't shift up or down. The dash displayed SH__51 and the amber warning light came on. I was able to ride it ahead to a safe pull off and stop, where the engine stalled (normally, I could stop in 3rd and the clutch would do it's thing and it wouldn't stall out).
I contacted my local Yamaha dealer that day and the service person I spoke with confirmed that there was a recall on early model AE's (mine's '06, so that covers me) regarding a failure of the mounting ears of the shift actuator. Yamafitter/Bill had that happen to him earlier this year. That recall was supposedly done on my bike, but it involved the actuator itself, not the bracket it mounts to. It may not apply here, but she wants to take this to Mama Yama and try anyway.
If Yamaha won't cover it (and I'm not thinking they will), I will disassemble the tail of the bike and pull the subframe and take it to someone who can TIG the bracket back where it belongs. If by a miracle Yamaha covers the failure, I suspect it will be quite some time before a replacement subframe is available. I have been told that Yamaha will not authorize a weld repair to the original subframe and will insist on a replacement of the whole thing. Not sure if that's true or not, but it wouldn't surprise me.
I'm not the first on this forum to report this failure, but the thread I found on Saturday was from back in '08, and I'm not sure there have been any other failures just like this one. Seems sort of rare. I'll keep this thread updated as to my ultimate repair mode, for those that are interested.
The shift actuator is located on the left side of the bike, under the side panel, just above the Hard/Soft lever for the rear shock:
The bracket that holds the shift actuator to the rear subframe broke, leaving the actuator loose and therefore unable to function. Here is what it should look like, the bracket welded to the back side of the subframe:
Here is the broken weld along the bottom of the bracket. Note how much play is in the mechanism, such that I can push this way inside the frame to show the bottom of the bracket:
When this broke, it left me stuck in 3rd and I couldn't shift up or down. The dash displayed SH__51 and the amber warning light came on. I was able to ride it ahead to a safe pull off and stop, where the engine stalled (normally, I could stop in 3rd and the clutch would do it's thing and it wouldn't stall out).
I contacted my local Yamaha dealer that day and the service person I spoke with confirmed that there was a recall on early model AE's (mine's '06, so that covers me) regarding a failure of the mounting ears of the shift actuator. Yamafitter/Bill had that happen to him earlier this year. That recall was supposedly done on my bike, but it involved the actuator itself, not the bracket it mounts to. It may not apply here, but she wants to take this to Mama Yama and try anyway.
If Yamaha won't cover it (and I'm not thinking they will), I will disassemble the tail of the bike and pull the subframe and take it to someone who can TIG the bracket back where it belongs. If by a miracle Yamaha covers the failure, I suspect it will be quite some time before a replacement subframe is available. I have been told that Yamaha will not authorize a weld repair to the original subframe and will insist on a replacement of the whole thing. Not sure if that's true or not, but it wouldn't surprise me.
I'm not the first on this forum to report this failure, but the thread I found on Saturday was from back in '08, and I'm not sure there have been any other failures just like this one. Seems sort of rare. I'll keep this thread updated as to my ultimate repair mode, for those that are interested.