Hi all.
I have a problem that I can't get to the bottom of so I'm hoping someone may have seen something similar and can offer some insight.
Just before Christmas I was riding my 08 GSA when the engine died with EWS! showing on the Kombi, leaving me stranded at the roadside. EWS! had shown a few times previously at key-on but cleared upon retrying. Starting the bike to head home had taken several attempts. Once recovered to home the GS-911 reported the typical "
10491: Electronic immobiliser malfunction" with "
no signal or value". So I:
- Replaced the battery, as I read it could have an impact and it was on my to-do list anyway (~9 yrs old) - No change.
- Un-taped the wiring loom from the ring antenna to the main loom to inspect for the usual reported damage - None found.
- Tried the spare key - No luck.
- Replaced the ring antenna - No change.
- Un-taped the main loom either side of the branch off to the ring antenna and down toward the ECU (BMSKP) - Still no damage found. Discovered that the bike seems to 'retry' every 38 secs which can make you think the wires you just moved are intermittent.
- Tested the continuity from the RA plug to the disconnected ECU plug - all 4 wires read ~0.5 Ohms even during wire manipulation.
- GS-911 View Key Status says (with RA connected) "The key currently in the ignition is INVALID and ENABLED. It is key number: 0". The info is the same with the spare key.
A few observations too:
- ODO/trip reset button on Kombi does nothing.
- INFO button on left bar does nothing, but indicators, horn and ESA buttons seem fine.
- Main beam switch works and blue indicator appears on Kombi but the lamp itself doesn't light.
- Dipped beam can switch itself on, apparently randomly (with and without GS-911 connected).
- Every 38 secs, either FUEL! or LAMPF! appear for <1 sec (EWS! disappears) and a servomotor can also be heard (tank removed, HID lamps connected).
This looks to me like the ECU is partially faulty. I presume a dealer can test the BMSKP to confirm? I don't want to arrange a replacement to find that it isn't the cause.
Can anyone add anything? Are any of the observations significant?
Thanks for reading.
- Paul