Forgot to say,come to get off the ferry in Hollyhead sunday night,baring mind I've 100 bikes behind me,jump on said bike,wife gets on,side stand up, make sure it's in neutral,turn the key absolutely zilch :shock: ,go through everything 2/3 times including the clutch lever nothing try for umteenth time turning the ignition on,hey presto,lights up,press start button and gone phewww.
Quote from: "Chris Canning"Forgot to say,come to get off the ferry in Hollyhead sunday night,baring mind I've 100 bikes behind me,jump on said bike,wife gets on,side stand up, make sure it's in neutral,turn the key absolutely zilch :shock: ,go through everything 2/3 times including the clutch lever nothing try for umteenth time turning the ignition on,hey presto,lights up,press start button and gone phewww.
That'll be the side-stand switch plunger sticking in, then. Possibly.
check connections at the the back of ignition key barrel- likely culprit
Well I'm certainley going to have to work my way through the bike,although it's got over 30,000 hard miles on it,the bike has never seen a winters day in it's life,so there's zero corrosion.
Quote from: "kelpie_67"check connections at the the back of ignition key barrel- likely culprit
On re-reading the problem description properly when sober, I'd suggest this too. Though when my switch went west, I lost only the ignition - still had lights, etc. A chum had the switch on his 2-y/o Speed Triple 1050 go too. He lost lights but not ignition.
I'd lost everything there was zilch,to be honest in just about any other situation I'd have not been to bothered and set about sorting it,but with dozens of bikers behind you all absolutely gung ho,not idle :D
+1 on the ign switch, sidestand switch wouldn't take out everything....