Blind Squirrel
Well-known member
No. We have to wait for him to get home from his job. I hear he soaks corks:............is the intermission over yet?
https://screen.yahoo.com/cork-soakers-000000587.html
No. We have to wait for him to get home from his job. I hear he soaks corks:............is the intermission over yet?
It doesn't sound like a kill switch if there was no electrical what so ever. Just back from a dealer; sounds like a loose battery ground to me. But that's just my opinion.... I've got no throttle, no electrical--nothin'. The bike is completely dead...]
I think I may have made that "no electrical" bit up to add drama--because now I think of it, though in my panic around the herd of elephants about to trample me, in the bright sunlight, I could not see whether the electrical died. But after stopping up against the concrete wall at left, and calmly just trying to re-start the bike, having turned the ignition key on and off, it started right up like a champ and I was able to blast on outta there like it was the DeLorean in Back to the Future.It doesn't sound like a kill switch if there was no electrical what so ever. Just back from a dealer; sounds like a loose battery ground to me. But that's just my opinion.... I've got no throttle, no electrical--nothin'. The bike is completely dead...]
...calmly just trying to re-start the bike, having turned the ignition key on and off, it started right up like a champ
Glad that worked for ya. I sure would miss your posts3) China made my ignition key switch.
I dunno... It does sound similar to my experience (linked on page 1 of this thread). You didn't get a new key cut recently by any chance did you?I think I may have made that "no electrical" bit up to add drama--because now I think of it, though in my panic around the herd of elephants about to trample me, in the bright sunlight, I could not see whether the electrical died. But after stopping up against the concrete wall at left, and calmly just trying to re-start the bike, having turned the ignition key on and off, it started right up like a champ and I was able to blast on outta there like it was the DeLorean in Back to the Future.It doesn't sound like a kill switch if there was no electrical what so ever. Just back from a dealer; sounds like a loose battery ground to me. But that's just my opinion.... I've got no throttle, no electrical--nothin'. The bike is completely dead...]
I installed the blaster horns along with the special harness made by some crazy FJR forum guy; got it years ago. Anyway, apparently Yamaha was smart enough on the stock horns to include some kinda pin that, even if the horns come loose, keeps them from bumping up against the shocks and other important stuff like the radiator, which I hear tell does something really important. So my Framms got all floppy and started thrashing around and screwing stuff up. $600 later and two weeks without the bike, I have a new radiator. The shop tightened them down snug and applied locktite. My job is to jiggle them occasionally.So did NEW HORNS = Radiator Repair or perhaps wayward tools when working on the lower triple tree clamps? It would be ironic if it was a new radiator guard that was supposed to prevent radiator damage...
The second half of the rest of the story
My theory about why the switch shut off, supported by test when I got home:
Yeah, what she ^^^^ says...you can't leave us hanging this long JB!
What you need is a Gen III. The run/stop and start switch is all one piece, so you can't press the starter button in the "stop" position.... there is a perfectly middle position of the kill switch where it lies flat--not fully on or off. With it in that position, I turned the key, hit the start button, and--it fired up...
The supply is there, your demand isn't high enough if it can wait... the basics of supply-demand; it can wait...
Actually, I have had a similar situation on my AE and it WILL coast. I had an opportunity to try a GPS back in 2006 at the Utah 1088. This was a loaner for a story a friend of mine was writing for CW at the time. The GPS was a large unit from Lowrance. I had used one of their aviation units and was curious to see their take on motorcycle GPS. It was big and heavy and was mounted to the tank via suction mount. After leaving the rally master's home and heading back to the hotel the night before the rally, I was following my friend down the road and suddenly the GPS mount lost its suction and the thing toppled over toward the right side of the bike. I had visions of the thing bouncing down the road behind me and having to explain that to the manufacturer, when the FJR just quit! Now I'm coasting to the side of the road with no engine power and I'm attempting to maintain control while preventing this GPS from taking a dirt nap. I get safely to the side and remount the GPS, but then I can't start the bike. It now occurs to me that the two events are related. When the GPS fell, it hit the kill switch. As soon as I switched it back to run, the bike fired right up.A final little comment: On my YCC-S, you wouldn't have the option of coasting. You can't free the drive (can't pull the clutch, can't change into neutral without going down the box through 1st). That's one thing I try to keep out of my mind when riding.
+1, Gunny; or become a TV Evangelist, or a Pimp in a Tijuana Whorehouse! jes' sayin' and nuff said, ese!JB, stick with risk management and finance..
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