1 DIY Starter Switch Sat Sep 23, 2017 1:00 pm
uhoh7
active member
If the bike will push start and runs fine, and the starter is clean and responds to a jump, but either OEM switch/rely is not working or unwanted, then a new starter switch is pretty easy as you see.
There is a good spot on the coil cover, and last shot shows cable routing. Basically all you need: high amp switch, heavy gauge wire, two short lengths. Drill a hole in coil cover about 20mm inboard from inner edge, centered between mounts. Route one cable to starter and carefully attach other end to battery. Mind your connections are not going to pop loose.
Starter switch by unoh7, on Flickr
Starter switch by unoh7, on Flickr
Starter switch by unoh7, on Flickr
Starter switch by unoh7, on Flickr
Once I learned the oem switch just allows a direct short unfused feed from battery, then I figured a work around should be easy. The button is big and not going to be pressed by accident. Yes it will turn the bike over with key off.
Switch by unoh7, on Flickr
Don't get me wrong: I would prefer the OEM method working, on my own bike. But this works fine, it seems.
There is a good spot on the coil cover, and last shot shows cable routing. Basically all you need: high amp switch, heavy gauge wire, two short lengths. Drill a hole in coil cover about 20mm inboard from inner edge, centered between mounts. Route one cable to starter and carefully attach other end to battery. Mind your connections are not going to pop loose.
Starter switch by unoh7, on Flickr
Starter switch by unoh7, on Flickr
Starter switch by unoh7, on Flickr
Starter switch by unoh7, on Flickr
Once I learned the oem switch just allows a direct short unfused feed from battery, then I figured a work around should be easy. The button is big and not going to be pressed by accident. Yes it will turn the bike over with key off.
Switch by unoh7, on Flickr
Don't get me wrong: I would prefer the OEM method working, on my own bike. But this works fine, it seems.