So, I've been dealing with electrical issues for about 4.5 months. On and off, on and off. Finally, I decided to exorcise all electrical work done by others and install a complete MotoGadget system.
Just to give you some ideas of what the electrical looked like from the "professionals at the shop":
Area from end of tank, heading to seat hump-
Rear brake switch. Notice the bullet connectors underneath
Underneath seat, as it "was". No shrink wrap, no loom wrapped, no harness, just a nice messy, loose gaggle of wires...
Tail light and license plate and indicator runs
Real workmanship here!
Bloody beautiful! why worry about how it looks?
No possible chance this will ever fail?
Changed my mind, I don't need these after all...
"You just tuck those under the seat when you install them..."
And now, finally the exorcism begins-
New headlight bucket wiring with the MotoGadget m-Button.
From this:
To this:
Proper install for coil wires
Just a tad tidier under the hump now...
This is wired picture of the m-Unit.
Signals from all hand control at the bar comes to this unit thru the single green wire in the middle, on the left side of device.
The brown wire at bottom left of device is black wire from key switch, plus black wire from Reg/Rec on left side of prior picture. The grommet carrying the Gr, Red, Bl, Yw and Brn are service to the front end of bike.
The right side of the device is essentially 12v "out" power to the lights, indicators, horn, starter solenoid, brake light and gauge, ignition (coils). Ive used Bl/Yw to the "rear" also as a second tap on those same ports.
Left side, under the tank now. Service to lights, horn, headlight all in the shrink wrap. The open blue wire is incomplete at the moment (12v service to gauge).
Close up of left side on m-Unit wired
With some great help from Devin (late night parts supplies and some technical answers) and some great out-of-band help from TwoTired, its wired (properly), fires either via push button or kick, and charges perfectly. Been a frustrating at times 4.5 days. But tremendously valuable to learn it all and understand it better. I think my next 2 bikes will be a LOT easier now that I know all the tricks and have a valid wiring diagram relevant to my devices.
Did I mention I hate wiring....