Wiring Diagram needed

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almartin770

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Hi All. 
needing an electronic file of a wiring diagram for a 2016ES. 
 

Any help would be appreciated. 
Either a copy you could send, or a link I can use to download. 
 

Thanks in advance. 
Al in Calgary

 
those drawings are copyrighted and against Forum rules to be published.  Suggest you either get a manual or find someone close by that can loan you one.

 
This is definitely not one of those forums that scans everything they can get their hands on and stores them in a file section. Anybody that asks about the eBay CD manuals (which are illegal scans) gets reamed pretty good, even. We do NOT want Yamaha coming after us for anything they would consider a violation on our part, or even an encouragement of violations on someone else's part.

Yamaha is the only source of what you're asking for, although there's a Haynes manual for the FJR that I've heard mixed reviews of. Dunno if Haynes has anything electrical or current.

(Ha! Coulda phrased that better...)

 
... although there's a Haynes manual for the FJR that I've heard mixed reviews of. Dunno if Haynes has anything electrical or current...
 
Haynes manual only covers UK bikes up to 2013 (2013 is the first year of Gen 3). USA 2016 would have some significant differences.

 
But the point made is valid. The forum has, since the beginning, advised people that to no digital version is (C) legally available to owners. It's a dealer service product that they are not supposed to resell. Paper versions are available FROM YAMAHA to owners. Other sources (unless being sold used) again aren't (C) legally sold by all the sources selling them. eBay may be comfortable taking on a pissed off Yamaha, but it's better that this forum avoid it completely.  In the past owners and members of this forum have worked closely with Yamaha to help them define model issues (like "ticking") so we don't relish souring that relationship.

Oh yeah, and it's in the rules you agreed to abide by when signing up to the forum.

https://www.fjrforum.com/guidelines/ (Item 9)

 
It is really too bad that Yamaha couldn't produce an electronic manual that had sufficient copyright protection.  

It is really convenient to simply print the required pages and take them out to the shop without worrying about ruining the manual.  Something that is searchable can save time in finding stuff as well.  I have a "legal" paper manual and tend to use photocopied sections that I keep for things I do more often - I keep a file of those things and replace pages as they get messed up.  Photocopies (that lie flat) of pages you are working from are much better than trying to hold open a bound manual to the right spot when you have both (greasy) hands elbows-deep in the bike.

As mentioned, if you have a bike and you actually work on it yourself, buy a manual - pay for it the first time you use it to do something you would otherwise have to take to the dealer.

 
It is really convenient to simply print the required pages and take them out to the shop without worrying about ruining the manual.  Something that is searchable can save time in finding stuff as well.  I have a "legal" paper manual and tend to use photocopied sections that I keep for things I do more often - I keep a file of those things and replace pages as they get messed up.  Photocopies (that lie flat) of pages you are working from are much better than trying to hold open a bound manual to the right spot when you have both (greasy) hands elbows-deep in the bike.
RossKean,

I agree.  I have a paper (legal) FSM, and I photo-copy out the pages I need, with any cross-reference pages (such as cowling removal, et c.) which may be needed for the work at hand.  'Way better than flipping back and forth all through the book, with greasy paws.  I keep these copied pages in plastic page protectors (from the office supply store) in a regular loose-leaf binder.  I'm building my own handy quick-reference "manual" for each of the jobs that I do on the bike. 

Cheers,
Infrared

.

 
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