Folks:That code is for the Intake Pressure Sensor. It is mounted in the area of the left end of the FI rail. You will have to raise the gas tank and prop it to see the sensor. If it is defective or unplugged your FJR will use a ‘look-up’ table and continue run just fine. While troubleshooting my bike I rode for a week or two with the sensor unplugged without any issues.
Go to the online Yamaha parts catalog, enter your bike year & make, then click on Intake 2; you are looking for item #18.
The Intake Pressure Sensor is the exact same as the Ambient Pressure Sensor under the seat and under the seat attachment cross bar. It is possible to directly swap these two sensors, but the sensor under the seat is a major PITA to get at the screws.
The sensor in question is used to measure the pressure (vacuum) in the intake and is used as one of the inputs used to determine the correct FI shot. Since your error code is movement related and the sensor is held in place by two screws I would suspect that you are chasing a harness problem and not a sensor problem.
Had this "14" error code on my 09er this morning, or rather on restart from gas station, the bike kind of "zzz----zzz---zzz--urrp----varroomed" to a start . . . and then as I was pulling out onto PCH in sunny Malibu I looked down to see the glaring light, never had seen that light before . . . WTF . . . "battery going dead"??? "no oil in engine"??? all the various catastrophic scenarios that the "check engine" light might indicate . . . phone the tow truck, now to save on total engine reconstruction???? Executive decision to "ride it til she fails and then make another decision . . ." . . . idled OK at stop lights, but on accel away it didn't seem too frisky . . . "reality or imagination??" . . . temp gauge showed "normal" temps . . . traffic wasn't too bad so riding 40mph in a "45mph" zone didn't result in being run over and left for dead . . . should I "take it easy" or "hammer time"?? Made it home OK . . . rolled the bike to the small area of concrete slab used for bike pre-launch checks . . . turned the key looking to check my mileage and instead of "22, 555" . . . it said "14" . . . ??? cpu's mind has been blown and has forgotten the miles it has supplied "management" for? Hmm, must be an error code????
Reading this thread it appears that it is "non-catastrophic" and possibly I could ride it this way until the 25K valve check? It did seem to have some influence on the smoothness of acceleration . . . here at more or less "sea level" and the light didn't come on in the SM mountains of what might be 1K foot elevation? Only after re-start, bike was "warm" . . . no visits to triple digits . . . just sat at a redlight for what might have been almost 5 mins before pulling into the gas station . . . .
One reason for this post is that the quoted section above the poster states "You are looking for #18" . . . which might have been the case at the time? Today, that number is for the "Throttle sensor assy" . . . and #17 is showing for the "sensor, pressure" . . . which seems like is the item that error 14 is referring to?? Not sure if it's worth the time to dig down there and sniff around . . . or forgetta bout it until the next service??? Bike does sit outside, covered . . . and a few thousand back my then mechanic rifled through the throttle area to release the throttle spring, and a few hoses and such were disconnected . . . but nothing such as the glaring red light of doom until this morning . . . . This is my first EFI bike, not used to these "non-verbal light flashes" . . . didn't know at the time that I could have turned it off and checked for the code (wouldn't have known what "14" would have meant) . . . thought that demise was imminent and headed for the home compound to do a post-ride "analysis and reflection" . . . .