Not shown in the wiring diagram.Thanks, I can't find anything about the ground system in the prints.
mcatrophy,
Found that I already had a picture with the arrows:Man, I can find two spiders in there, but not three. Can you add arrows (or circles) for these three spiders? Thanks.
Don't fool yourself. The recall was a joke and just moved the problem from S4 to S6. When I did my repair as documented above I soldered both while I was in there. No problems since........ and Yamaha finally released a recall to deal with it.
Pretty much. I had the S4 done under the recall on my 2007. After that, I had to deal with a cooked S6 and then a non-spider grounding issue in a connector on the left side. No other issues before I sold it a couple of years ago with 165,000 miles.The recall was a joke and just moved the problem from S4 to S6.
That's funny. I really never know what Yamaha's final fix was... all I remember was people complaining it wasn't enough and I passed on the OEM recall mods. By the time they came out with it, I had my own fix and I had moved on. I had proven to myself in the following updated charts it wasn't going to be an issue on my bike anymore. No spider was carrying more than 10 amps at peak conditions.Don't fool yourself. The recall was a joke and just moved the problem from S4 to S6. When I did my repair as documented above I soldered both while I was in there. No problems since.
That stands to reason because even if S4 was grounded directly to the frame or battery, the original chart shows S6 still would be flowing over 22 amps (too much!!). The current needed to be diverted at or upstream of S6 too.Pretty much. I had the S4 done under the recall on my 2007. After that, I had to deal with a cooked S6 and then a non-spider grounding issue in a connector on the left side. No other issues before I sold it a couple of years ago with 165,000 miles.
No issues (so far) with my 2011 and I have not done anything in terms of spider maintenance. Next season, I am going to lower wattage LED replacements and I might consider a headlight relay to remove even that load. Don't have to deal with much stop-and-go riding in traffic on hot days so the fan circuitry doesn't get much of a workout.
Enter your email address to join: