No, the starter motor cranks fine after the shutdown incident occurred. If the engine suddenly froze up, I don't think the starter motor would sound normal or crank, and it sounds completely normal. Yesterday when I had the #1 spark plug out, checking for spark after the shutoff incident happened, I could hear the #1 piston creating suction, I was close enough to hear it, because I was looking at the spark plug and its gap, as the plug laid against the cylinder.
I have heard, but not personally experienced, a coil failure that can occur when the heat from the engine -- which is rising up and heating the coils -- that a coil can intermittently stop working. If true, that might mean after cooling off now for about 18 hours since last night, the bike might fire up again (might). I'll check this out.
I'll have to check for voltage at the coils too.
I'm familiar with the "pull the clutch in" lockout that's on most bikes since the late 70s' and onward -- the functionality was to not allow the *starter* motor to crank unless the clutch was pulled in.
On 1970s bikes, they did not have that "pull in the clutch to allow the starter motor to turn" feature -- if the bike was in gear, and you pushed the 'start' button, the bike would leap forward. I have personally experienced that; started riding in 1976. I'm pretty sure even my 1977 Kz1000 had that issue. Then the bike companies began putting the clutch-lever-pulled-in-or-no-start interlock switch to prevent that.
There are various fail points like that: clutch lock out, sidestand lockout, Start/Run button. This bike has all of those.
Because of the fact that the bike was
- on the center stand
- in neutral
- and was running fine
yesterday, since the sidestand/clutch/Start-Run lockouts are just switches, and the bike was already running, I just figured the chance that a mechanical switch like those three will suddenly fail is very remote. Possible, but unlikely.
The way it shut off like instantly, it was more like an electrical component failed.
I know nothing about ignitors and wondered if an ignitor -- which is an electronic component, not a mechanical switch -- might explain the sudden shutoff.