I lubed and adjusted the cable a few times with no joy. So I ordered up a new OEM cable. I just installed it tonight and the problem is gone.
The OEM cable is only about three bucks more than the aftermarket crap, and when comparing them side-by-side, you can see several differences:
1) Thicker cable
2) Barrel at lever end on OEM cable has a plastic "sleeve" around it.
3) Thicker housing
4) Clevis, springs, and other hardware thicker and higher quality
5) Higher quality, thicker boots on engine end.
6) Pre-lubed
The MP cable is now hanging on the wall as an emergency replacement -- that's all it's good for.
I had a similar experience earlier this summer when replacing the throttle cables on my V-Strom -- the OEM cable set was backordered indefinitely, so I was stuck ordering a Motion Pro set. The MP set was very obviously a cheap imitation, with low-rent hardware, thinner housings, and chintzy boots and covers. And it was actually a few bucks more than the OEM cable, although the shop I ordered from only charged me the OEM price. Throttle cables are under much less stress, so I'm hoping it'll be OK until the OEM units are available again.
The moral of the story: order OEM parts whenever possible. There are lots of companies out there selling all kinds of dangerous imitation junk -- gaskets, carb kits, brake and clutch levers, fork seals, and most worrying of all, shoddy brake caliper and master cylinder kits that cost more and don't even include new pistons.
To add insult to injury, the imitation crap actually costs more in many cases.
Of course, there are cases where modern aftermarket parts are better and/or save significant amounts of money -- tires, shocks, brake pads, brake lines, wheel bearings, steering stem bearings, some brands of oil filters, etc.
There are also times when OEM parts are not available, so you have to make do with aftermarket.
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