birkdale10
Well-known member
I am having problems with my Zumo 550 handlebar connection. I browsed for someone that might have had similar problems, but... got to start a new topic.
I've had the Zumo for about 4 years. The electrical connection was 'professionally' mounted by the local YamaShop, and has given me no problems in the past. But, I went out this week, hooked up the GPS and it is not getting power.
(Let me make this perfectly clear - me and electricity do not get along well. This is the guy that initially wired his attic exhaust fan with speaker wire. And, when it kept blowing the fuse, stuck his finger inside the fuse box to see what the problem was. (Wow, that was the best shock I ever got!))
So, could someone walk me through baby steps to see what the problem is?
The Zumo works fine. And I can use it in the car mount, and electrical connections work there.
How can I test the electrical cord on the bike? I have a good electrical tester (i.e.: digital multimeter). There are 4 contact holes in the connector head. Are all of them 'hot'? One a ground? If I poke the contacts around in those 4 little holes, what will it tell me?
I have the Zumo mount sitting next to me. The 4 hold connector obviously goes into the hole with the 4 pins. And power swoops around inside the mount and works its way to the 24 pin mount. How can I test if power is getting this far? Multimeter again? If I do a test and the power just seems to not work its way from the 4 pins to the 24 pin mount - what do I do? Is there anything that can be repaired?
Here is where I admit my (probable) error. I have had the mount (without the Zumo) attached to the bike for almost a year. The magnetic weather cap has been on (mostly...). But I have not attached the GPS for, as I say, almost a year. Last week, when I tried to connect, I could see that some of the gold 24-pin contacts were...blue. I used a fine wire brush on the and removed all the visible corrosion. But there is still no power.
I can see tiny little screws all over the mount and it looks as if I could open up the unit and see if there is any visible damage inside. But, if I do that, can I reseal it in a waterproof manner?
Any and all help, suggestions, offers, constructive criticism welcome.
I've had the Zumo for about 4 years. The electrical connection was 'professionally' mounted by the local YamaShop, and has given me no problems in the past. But, I went out this week, hooked up the GPS and it is not getting power.
(Let me make this perfectly clear - me and electricity do not get along well. This is the guy that initially wired his attic exhaust fan with speaker wire. And, when it kept blowing the fuse, stuck his finger inside the fuse box to see what the problem was. (Wow, that was the best shock I ever got!))
So, could someone walk me through baby steps to see what the problem is?
The Zumo works fine. And I can use it in the car mount, and electrical connections work there.
How can I test the electrical cord on the bike? I have a good electrical tester (i.e.: digital multimeter). There are 4 contact holes in the connector head. Are all of them 'hot'? One a ground? If I poke the contacts around in those 4 little holes, what will it tell me?
I have the Zumo mount sitting next to me. The 4 hold connector obviously goes into the hole with the 4 pins. And power swoops around inside the mount and works its way to the 24 pin mount. How can I test if power is getting this far? Multimeter again? If I do a test and the power just seems to not work its way from the 4 pins to the 24 pin mount - what do I do? Is there anything that can be repaired?
Here is where I admit my (probable) error. I have had the mount (without the Zumo) attached to the bike for almost a year. The magnetic weather cap has been on (mostly...). But I have not attached the GPS for, as I say, almost a year. Last week, when I tried to connect, I could see that some of the gold 24-pin contacts were...blue. I used a fine wire brush on the and removed all the visible corrosion. But there is still no power.
I can see tiny little screws all over the mount and it looks as if I could open up the unit and see if there is any visible damage inside. But, if I do that, can I reseal it in a waterproof manner?
Any and all help, suggestions, offers, constructive criticism welcome.
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