I'mTheGuy
Active member
Well, after 2 1/2 days of installing and consistently not having cruise control, breaking down eight and buttoning up about nine times, I'm finally riding with cruise control. Whew! I'm wore out, but I didn't give up. I know this Audiovox Cruise Control on an FJR 1300AE like a pro now. Oh, by the way, guess what had me tearing down and buttoning up so much? Well, I had read on a post on this forum where one member ended up breaking the little white vacuum tube on the AVCC. I'm very heavy-handed so, I said to myself, "I know how to prevent that from happening to me, use one of those right-angle, 90 degree, RUBBER vacuum elbows." Well I did just that. Problem is, Oh, I feel so STUPID having to say this, but here it goes, YOU CAN'T PUSH THAT THING ALL THE WAY DOWN ON THAT LITTLE WHITE TUBE AND "ZIP_TIE", THAT'S RIGHT, "ZIP-TIE" IT OFF. You know where this is going, right? THE VACUUM CAN'T BREATHE IF IT'S BLOCKED OFF WITH RUBBER ELBOW. AAGH, how stupid could I be?
Anyway, after tearing down eight times, checking every electrical connection again and again and basically doing every troubleshooting method I could find on this forum and the cruise control still didn't work, I decided to tear everything down and start all over before wrongfully deeming I had a bad servo. Well, in the start of taking every thing down, I used an exacto knife to cut the zip-tie off of the rubber elbow I installed over the vacuum tube on the AVCC and then I pulled the elbow from that tube and heard this sucking sound and it felt like the elbow was stuck at first. I thought, "Hmm, something's definitely got some vacuum action!" That's when it hit me like a boulder. "I bet your dumb, heavy-handed a$$ pushed that elbow so far down on that tube, it couldn't breathe." I reinstalled the elbow ensuring it could breathe and buttoned everything up for a ninth time, took a test drive and EUREKA!!!, I've got cruise control and it feels so good too.
So, too add to the list of troubleshooting tips for the AVCC install and save about seven tear-downs and button-ups, if you use rubber elbows in your install, don't push them so far they end up blocking the breathing action of the servo! Thanks to Smitty, BrunDog, Ionbeam and all the others who contributed to my install by sharing their knowledge professionally and by trial and error. I'm going to rest now! :blink:
Anyway, after tearing down eight times, checking every electrical connection again and again and basically doing every troubleshooting method I could find on this forum and the cruise control still didn't work, I decided to tear everything down and start all over before wrongfully deeming I had a bad servo. Well, in the start of taking every thing down, I used an exacto knife to cut the zip-tie off of the rubber elbow I installed over the vacuum tube on the AVCC and then I pulled the elbow from that tube and heard this sucking sound and it felt like the elbow was stuck at first. I thought, "Hmm, something's definitely got some vacuum action!" That's when it hit me like a boulder. "I bet your dumb, heavy-handed a$$ pushed that elbow so far down on that tube, it couldn't breathe." I reinstalled the elbow ensuring it could breathe and buttoned everything up for a ninth time, took a test drive and EUREKA!!!, I've got cruise control and it feels so good too.
So, too add to the list of troubleshooting tips for the AVCC install and save about seven tear-downs and button-ups, if you use rubber elbows in your install, don't push them so far they end up blocking the breathing action of the servo! Thanks to Smitty, BrunDog, Ionbeam and all the others who contributed to my install by sharing their knowledge professionally and by trial and error. I'm going to rest now! :blink: