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Thread: bike dies in rain, elp!

  1. #1
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    23rd November 2003 - 21:16
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    bike dies in rain, elp!

    Im heading up from hokitika to nelson tomorrow and its supposed to be pissing down (again).

    Bike has been doing great work, but in the rain about 30kms from Greymouth on at 11pm xmas night the bike just lost all power and came to a halt. After the noise the dark, no sign of houses or cars, just the depressing sound of rain drumming down on my helmet. Stopped for a few minutes, then it started again and travelled less than a km and died again. Started it once again and it was fine all the way to hokitika although it was pissing down.

    Seems like its something warm and electrical as it seems to dry and get moving down. Tomorrow the rains supposed to be heavier so I was looking for any suggestions. Its not one cylinder its the whole lot dying. I have done a search of forums and havent found anything. Could be a LONG trip at this rate, ANY IDEAS?

  2. #2
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    26th February 2005 - 15:10
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    All dying suddenly suggests low tension. And a short . Do all the other electrical things seem OK when it happens? Water in the kill switch ? Check round the CDI unit (I'm assuming it has one) or FI computer if it has that. And give the ignition switch a blast of WD40. Did you do the "turn ignition off, turn ignition on" thing when it stopped? Tempting to assume it's water in the works, but always a bit risky, assumptions.

    Could be the ignition pickup being flooded, was there a lot of spray from the road?
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  3. #3
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    2nd August 2004 - 12:45
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    Spray the electrics liberally with CRC ?

  4. #4
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    19th September 2006 - 22:02
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    Quote Originally Posted by Timber020 View Post
    Im heading up from hokitika to nelson tomorrow and its supposed to be pissing down (again).

    Bike has been doing great work, but in the rain about 30kms from Greymouth on at 11pm xmas night the bike just lost all power and came to a halt. After the noise the dark, no sign of houses or cars, just the depressing sound of rain drumming down on my helmet. Stopped for a few minutes, then it started again and travelled less than a km and died again. Started it once again and it was fine all the way to hokitika although it was pissing down.

    Seems like its something warm and electrical as it seems to dry and get moving down. Tomorrow the rains supposed to be heavier so I was looking for any suggestions. Its not one cylinder its the whole lot dying. I have done a search of forums and havent found anything. Could be a LONG trip at this rate, ANY IDEAS?
    Sounds like the CDI or modern equal ... had a similar problem when when tour the north island. could travel 10 15ks and then died as the CDI warmed up... let it cool and do another 10k ... was a long trip home

    is it only when it gets wet or in all weather it dies? I agree with Ixion

  5. #5
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    9th November 2006 - 18:42
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    Quote Originally Posted by Motig View Post
    Spray the electrics liberally with CRC ?
    How about using WD40 - CRC is an abrasive, WD40 is not.

  6. #6
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    10th April 2005 - 09:35
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    Why not just put a raincoat on ya bike and ride between showers.

    Wouldn't use either crc or wd40. Use Electrical Contact Cleaner made by CRC, is a water repellent as well.

    Good Luck
    It is what it is

  7. #7
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    23rd November 2003 - 21:16
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    Yeah its weird, rest of the electrics are all fine, just kills the engine. Bike has a powercommander under the seat but I would have thought it was well away from influence from rain. I will get some crc electric stuff tomorrow on my way north. its only happened on this trip and only in rain. Maybe I will have to keep the speed down to, keep the rain from being driven into it so heavily.

    Thanks very very much for you imput guys, I really appreciate it!

  8. #8
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    6th July 2005 - 17:55
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    Hey dude, if your riding your RGV in the wet your probably getting the same problem as I get.. turns out water getting kicked up from the front wheel shorts out the spart plug on the bottom cylinder, and mate that thing is hard to ride on 1 cylinder .. also paranoid that it would kick back in and Id get thrown on my ass.. I thought about just putting some duct tape over the fairing where you can see the spark plug lead.. might help.. maybe getting some kind of water proofing agent that you can spray around the plug or something..

    Those RGVs are the best design for wet riding, when I look under my seat you can see wires and all sorts hanging nice and open waiting to get wet.. so I just ride the cib in shite weather. Just try and keep all your electrics away from the water. good luck mate!

    edit: helps if I read your post properly eh? haha!
    Last edited by awesker; 28th December 2006 at 00:00. Reason: cause Im an ass.

  9. #9
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    24th September 2004 - 06:46
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    Quote Originally Posted by awesker View Post
    Hey dude, if your riding your RGV in the wet your probably getting the same problem as I get.. turns out water getting kicked up from the front wheel shorts out the spart plug on the bottom cylinder, and mate that thing is hard to ride on 1 cylinder .. also paranoid that it would kick back in and Id get thrown on my ass.. I thought about just putting some duct tape over the fairing where you can see the spark plug lead.. might help.. maybe getting some kind of water proofing agent that you can spray around the plug or something..
    That's were decent mudguards with mud flaps come in handy. Anyone else remember them ?

  10. #10
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    20th November 2002 - 03:11
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    It's not Italian, is it?????

    ACC - It's where the Enron accountants all went.

  11. #11
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    24th September 2004 - 06:46
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    Quote Originally Posted by What? View Post
    It's not Italian, is it?????

    Don't BMW 650s have wiring issues
    Gerty has this horrible scoop on her front mudguard that actually flicks up water onto the low tension leads. Liquid cooling I guess . Fucken Hondas.

  12. #12
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    24th September 2004 - 06:46
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    Quote Originally Posted by Patch View Post
    Why not just put a raincoat on ya bike and ride between showers.

    Wouldn't use either crc or wd40. Use Electrical Contact Cleaner made by CRC, is a water repellent as well.
    Doesn't it leave the contacts dry though, agreed good for initial cleaning, wereas wd40 leaves a protective film over the contacts. Theres silicon contact gunk available as well. A mate uses it on his Ducatis contacts.

  13. #13
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    20th November 2002 - 03:11
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    Nah - the wiring's OK, just issues with some of the bits hanging off the ends of it. Italian bits...

    That should do it!
    ACC - It's where the Enron accountants all went.

  14. #14
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    6th July 2005 - 17:55
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    Quote Originally Posted by Bonez View Post
    That's were decent mudguards with mud flaps come in handy. Anyone else remember them ?
    yeah my RGV has a nice fat ugly mudguard that I want to pull off.. but just sitting above that is the wires.. so water vapour would rape it!

  15. #15
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    2nd August 2004 - 12:45
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    I'm curious. CRC 5-56 is an abrasive ? The one that says "Advanced Lubrication" on the can ? Mind you I probably left it a bit open as they do make more than the 5-56, just its the only CRC I use.

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