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First off , clean every bit of the dialectric grease out of every connector. Dusty
Thanks Dusty. I knew I was going to hear that one. I appreciate you being the better part of my conscience. As the old saying goes you can learn from your own experience or you can learn from the experience of others. Some people swear by di-electric grease, some swear at it. This may be one of those times when di-electric grease is a bad thing.In the past, I've never had any trouble with di-electric grease. When I started doing this, I was thinking it may or may not work, I might just end up cleaning the grease out of these connections. On the additional information side, the two wires go to the pair of 30 amp fuses on the left side or the bike.
No attempt at being anyone's conscience , I learned that one the hard way . Kinda surprised Chuckie hasn't weighed in , or Kiwi Roy , or ...dialectric grease isn't a conductor , really kinda surprised the bike will run at all . Dusty
And DON'T be tempted to play around with the "sacred screw".
Here is the leads that I use for Diagnostics- you were asking were to get in USAhttps://www.obdinnovations.com/kkl-obd2-usb-cable-ftdi-ft232rl-chip-3-pin-adapter-cable/
That high idle, then cut out is a worry. I'd also be checking the basics - check the throttle cable action, especially at the throttle body end (you may have to clear some of the fancy bodywork off to see), & check the operation of the fast idle cable, ensure the airbox is clean and the filter fresh, check the spark plug caps & HT cables with an ohmmeter (multimeter set to ohms) & the connection to the coils, check the integrity of the rubber manifolds, try fresh spark plugs. I'd also check the state of the connector between the alternator & regulator (2 yellow wires in and out - a known weak point on the 2TB bikes) and the lambda connector (usually tucked in behind the starter motor) - you could even just unplug the lambda temporarily & give it whirl, see if there's any difference. As everything seems interconnected, I prefer to check out all the things I can first, before getting to he bits that require money or expertise I don't yet have.
So, should I smear a big hunk of di-electric grease on all the ECU pins now?
Well found, sir. I would never have guessed the culprit. When my tip over sensors work, the start button doesn't function at all (and, by the way, I've never actually found them, neither on the Classic nor the Special, whose sensor is a little dodgy - they seem to keep changing the place where they lodge them). It good to have a picture of one - now I know what it look for, I should at least try to find the one on the Special before putting the engine back in. Access should be easier.
While you'e at it, taking the relays apart and packing them, too, would be a great idea.I'm here to help..