LowAndSilent
Well-known member
Well, I just stumped the service tech at the local Yamaha dealership by asking him that question. Interesting question indeed.
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The bike will be in gear with the clutch engaged until around 1100 rpm (remember the rear wheel will be spinning the engine). At that rpm the clutch will disengage, the engine RPM will drop to zero and you will coast to a stop. When you turn off the key the clutch will re engage as usual. If you want to push the bike, either turn on the key, or manually shift to neutral as I described above.With a regular clutch I'd just disengage it and roll off the highway. But what happens with YCC-S?
I actually had this happen to me on the AE (actually, a rather large GPS unit I had suction-mounted to the tank fell over and hit the kill switch...don't ask). It just slowed and costed to a stop. No wheel lock up. However, I did have to rock the bike back and forth a little to get it back down to neutral for a restart.How about just roll down on open stretch of road and highway speed, hit the thumb kill switch and see what happens? Isn't that about as close to a controlable "out-of-gas" situation? Thats what I would do....
Did you have to manually shift to neutral?<snip>However, I did have to rock the bike back and forth a little to get it back down to neutral for a restart.
Trying killing your engine with the kill button while underway. Let us know what happens.Well, you never know what might happen. During my last trip to Chicago from NYC I've had an instance when the gas station where I was planning to refuel was closed, and the nearest one was over 35 miles away.
I'd still like to know for certain what happens with the YCC-S...
I've never tried to start it in anything other than neutral...I always look for that friendly green light before firing it off.Did you have to manually shift to neutral?<snip>However, I did have to rock the bike back and forth a little to get it back down to neutral for a restart.
It should start in any gear.
Brodie
My bike almost never saw neutral. I stopped in first, parked in first, and always started in first.<snip>
I've never tried to start it in anything other than neutral...I always look for that friendly green light before firing it off.
Here's what happens: At about 65 miles on the reserve mileage indicator the bike starts missing. Jerking the bike side to side to get it running again. It will get you a few more miles. At 69 miles the engine dies. There is some engine breaking as you pull to the should. As the RPMs drop, the clutch engages, you can then downshift. When you come to a stop the bike is in first gear, shift into neutal. No drama at all.Somehow I think that turning the ignition off or switching the engine cut-off switch is not the same as running out of gas, because in both cases it might remove power from the YCC-S, whereas if it just runs out of gas - YCC-S might still have the power to properly disengage.
It's weird, though, that it appears nobody _really_ knows what'll happen. As unlikely an event as it is, I think it's still better to know _exactly_ what happens in this case, if not for other reason then just out of curiosity.
I guess the only way to really know is for you not to buy an fuel for awhile and see what happens for yourself.
You would think there is some pre-programed action if one does run out.
The point was to find out whether the bike will coast enough to get off a busy highway and not get hit from behind, when you suddenly start to decelerate in the hammer lane.This is cracking me up. This is just too bloody simple in any way. I mean, if you run out of fuel hit the kill switch or don't. Pull over, jump off the bike, what ever. Do you really think Yamaha would design a bike that when it runs out of gas it'll do you harm? THINK!
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