radman
R.I.P. Our Motorcycling Friend
Heat wrap only delays the inevitable-it will not prevent the unit heating up if it's in a constant heat environment, and it will delay it's cooling once the heat source is gone.
I don't think that's going to do anything for you. I haven't unwound the spring and when my cruise works it pulls like it's supposed to. Up hill, two up loaded it'll resume to the preset speed no problem.Sounds to me like I need to unwind the center spring
Please be sure and let us know how that goes. I'm very interested in how this turns out. If all that does nothing for your problem you may even want to look at how you have the cable attached, since it's the one deviation from the majority of installs.I will receive a new unit later this week and hope to install next week. I will start with just the servo, if that does not fix the problem I will start a very careful install of each subsystem, testing as each component is added. I am worried that the new unit will not fix the problem. I will deal with that if and when.
How does my cable install differ from the majority? I think my cable install is very standard, small button head screw, beaded chain on an eyelet, eyelet swings freely, 7 beads I think, parallel connector connecting servo cable to top throttle cable, about 0.2 slack, etc.Please be sure and let us know how that goes. I'm very interested in how this turns out. If all that does nothing for your problem you may even want to look at how you have the cable attached, since it's the one deviation from the majority of installs.I will receive a new unit later this week and hope to install next week. I will start with just the servo, if that does not fix the problem I will start a very careful install of each subsystem, testing as each component is added. I am worried that the new unit will not fix the problem. I will deal with that if and when.
Oops, sorry. Got my wires crossed as to whom posted what. It was Alex and his cable install I was thinking of.How does my cable install differ from the majority?
It is a blue plastic connector with two leads and one is a switched lead that supplies power only after the the engine is running. The switched lead I connected to looks green but with the posi-tap in place there is not enough visible wire to see a stripe. As an experimented I have also connected the red/orange fused lead and control pad ground to the accessory plug in the fairing glove box, as with every other test this made no difference.rfulcher --
You mentioned in your first post that your CC power is obtained from:
"Power lead to blue connector switched hot wire under left fairing."
What is the color of the wire that you're tapping for power? I'm assuming its an unused circuit for grip heating.
According to the electrical schematic there are two unused two-wire plugs on the left side. Both of these plugs would connect to the grip heater controller.
Blue plug has two wires:
Red/Black wire = grip heaters switched ground wire
Green/Blue wire = power supply wire to heater controller (switched on when the headlights come on, fed from Headlight relay)
Other plug has two wires:
Black = heater controller ground wire
Light green/White = heater controller wire from ECU
I think the ECU modulates the heater controller based on road speed -- you need more frequent heating cycles when you're going faster.
It would seem that only two of the above four wires is powered. You didn't connect to the Green/Blue wire so you may have connected to the Light green/White wire which may not be good.
Or, tee in a vacuum gauge and actually see what is going on. Bada-bing; bada-boom, done. Not all tubing is vacuum tubing, there is a specific vacuum tube that resists collapsing, as opposed to pressure tubing that resists ballooning.what if a vacuum hose was collapsing...got pinched off as...the hose got soft...replace the vacuum line with a different type or route it in a way to keep it away from any heat sources.
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