1st, you need an electronic flasher. I bought this one from my local auto parts store (Advance Auto). It is a EP34 model. If you get a different one, the wiring will be different: Left should be earth/ground, middle the load, and right the 12V.
2nd, you're going to need a ground wire. I just used some spare I had, probably somewhere around 14AWG. It doesn't need to be very long, just to go from the flasher to a ground or the battery terminal.
Let's get started!
Find your old flasher relay. It's on the left side of the bike, under the cover.
Wiggle it on out, and unplug it. Be careful, the plug may be brittle. Mine cracked on one side when I removed it.
Here's the old flasher (top) compared to the new one (bottom):
But wait! The old one has 2 connections and the new one has 3! The 3rd connection on the new flasher is the ground.
Let's run that ground. I went straight to the negative battery terminal with it. Run it down and over where the flasher harness it, and crimp/solder a female spade plug to the end.
Let's hook it up! Plug the ground you just ran into the ground on the flasher. Plug the factory harness into the remaining pins. Mount how you choose; I just stuck a ziptie around it
And that's it. You now have an electronic flasher running with your 1st gen auto-cancelling TSCU. And yes, it does still auto cancel :P
Here's a wiring and pin-out diagram of the 2 flashers:
Here's mine in action; I have no front signals yet, so the factory flasher didn't work because of the reduced load.
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