mcatrophy
Privileged to ride a 2018 FJR1300AS
Peace, friend.I'm not trying to be a butt here, but I really don't know where you get the idea that it has a "detection circuit" nor how such a circuit wold work. The purple wire is an INPUT into the CC's logic. No volts, OK to engage. Volts, disengage. There is NOTHING ELSE THERE.
How could the purple wire possibly "detect" a blown fuse??!?!?!
The fact that you use the hot side of the brake light circuit for 12V IS the detection circuit. If the fuse is blown, there's no volts, AVCC will not even power up. That red wire is the AVCC's MAIN power. Blown fuse "detected!" Engagement inhibited.
[img=[URL="https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-ljUahRnblzc/U0__rSAWNII/AAAAAAAANVo/S-5T3PLlkZM/s640/brake%20light.jpg%5D"]https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-ljUahRnblzc/U0__rSAWNII/AAAAAAAANVo/S-5T3PLlkZM/s640/brake%20light.jpg][/URL]
All I am saying, and all I've said all along, is that connecting the red wire to the hot side of the brake light switch, behind the fuse, is a safety feature, and is the only way the AVCC has to know if the fuse is blown.
If the red wire is connected somewhere else, then the AVCC can engage regardless of the fuse's condition, but the purple wire will never see any voltage to trigger a disengage. There are no volts on that line if the fuse is blown.
If the purple wire sees voltage from something else, some other bleed into the line (as apparently happens on GenII bikes) then the AVCC won't engage, again regardless of the fuse condition or the power source.
But a properly connected AVCC, which may entail a relay on the purple wire, cannot detect the fuse's condition if the red wire is connected anywhere other than behind that fuse. And to me, that's a safety issue. No brake lights, no disengage.
First of all,, my lame excuse, I'm on tour Somewhere in Spain or Portugal (depending on which day of the week), suffering from not very good wifi connections using my far-from-ideal phone.
Thought you were talking about a blown (fused?) brake light, not its fuse.
Ok, you are correct, powering the CC from the signalling fuse will guarantee the CC will stop working if that fuse blows. But do remember, if the CC remains powered, and you brake hard, the CC (certainly the Audiovox one, and I suspect others) will notice that it is unable to maintain its control of the speed. If you pull the clutch (not an option with my AS/AE), the engine will rapidly increase its rpm, the CC WILL DISENGAGE. If you don't pull the clutch, the CC will fight the brakes for a bit, but will soon realise it can't maintain speed, and, again, it WILL DISENGAGE. So the system is still "safe".
Oh, just to be pedantic, the "detection circuit" does put out a current. Open circuit that wire, it will disengage the CC, with no external driving voltage. So it's a (weak) output as well as an input.