While on the sidestand, turn on the ignition, and everything works. Touch the starter and the bike starts, but the lighting fuse blows. All other fuses are fine.
A volt/ohmmeter is only partly good, because the lighting circuit is branched in several places, some at the front, and probably more inside the harness. No problems expected in the harness because it was bought brand new about a year ago.
Buy a box of fuses and try to isolate the problem...First: remove the fairing. That takes care of the headlight and front signals/park lights. Problem continues.
At the fusebox the wire is orange-green. Pull open every connection at the front that connects with OG wires. Problem continues.
Lift the tank. Pull the plugs for the signals, oil pressure, gear indicator and fuel gauge. Disconnect the flasher, and pull wires off rear brake switch. Problem continues.
Maybe feedback through the R/R. Disconnect it. Problem continues
Maybe a problem with the starter switch circuit. Bypass it.
Turn on ignition, now I have no lights, no instrumentation, no charging system. There is no electrical load on anything. Only the ignition works.
Check it out before starting. Turn on ignition. Nothing happens. Fuse holds.
Starter switch circuit is disconnected and then bypassed by connecting the starter relay directly to the battery. Turn on ignition..connect starter....bike starts....lighting fuse blows. :roll:
Bought an open fuse block and can re-wire to create separate circuits for lights, instruments, signals, but still
cannnot understand what blows the fuse as there is no starter circuit, or anyting else to impose a load or induce an electric flow that is in any way connected to the starter. All it has is a wire that leads directly to the battery. yet still the lighting fuses blow the moment the starter is engaged, and the other fuses do nothing.
All that's left is vibration...but what vibrates? Maybe a conductive and invisible feather that floats over and connects two otherwise unused wires?
Suggestions? Please...?
Comment