Troubleshooting electrical issues by smell

Following the principles of planned obsolescence and knowing dinosaur juice supply is dwindling Triumph are simply preparing you for transition to British electric motorcycles.

All service and breakdown issues will be diagNOSED by Olfactory trained technicians :whitstling:
 
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Mr Hunt posted. Will this thread self destruct - how poetic

mi2.jpg
 
Actually back to OP question. I would look how the harness was mounted. It is very conceivable that he harness was allowed to move around chaffing the wires on on the chassis, on themselves within the harness, and or wiggling the plug connections resulting in shorts or extra resistance.
 
Following the principles of planned obsolescence and knowing dinosaur juice supply is dwindling Triumph are simply preparing you for transition to British electric motorcycles.

All service and breakdown issues will diagNOSED by Olfactory trained technicians :whitstling:

Electric motorcycles. Bloody ugly, not loud enough, don't sound right, but I have seen performance tests and they seem to continuously out perform a lot of bikes.
Sad really as I cannot imagine buying one.
Can't afford one a anyway.
 
Actually back to OP question. I would look how the harness was mounted. It is very conceivable that he harness was allowed to move around chaffing the wires on on the chassis, on themselves within the harness, and or wiggling the plug connections resulting in shorts or extra resistance.

OK I'll be the one to say it (though not the first one). The R3 uses the thinnest, lightest duty wire I have ever seen on a motorcycle. It's really a wonder they don't have more electrical problems.
 
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