I wanted to run my troubleshooting process by you guys and see of this makes sense. First, a little background. A few days ago I started a bunch of mods to my 2007 midnight (already had Bigshots). Added Churckey VBAK, Coil & Sensor relocation, AIS block off, added a PC3 (used a map from the downloads section with my exact setup).
So I get finished and go out on the 10 mile test drive. At one point I was going about 80mph and slowing down slightly when the engine seemed to cutout for 1 or 2 seconds. It was so subtle that I wasn't even sure what happened, so I started thinking and remembered that in my excitement to go on the test drive I forgot I was supposed to zero out the throttle position on the PC3 (I think, that must be the problem). Went home, and did that, then went for a 50 mile ride. no more engine cutouts. The next day I went for another 100 mile ride and in the first 20 minutes the engine completely shutdown at right around 3000 rpm (80mph) about 8-10 times for anywhere from 2 to 6 seconds. I could recreate the same feeling by riding at 80mph and flipping the kill switch off, then flipping it back on, so I knwo the engine was completely shutdown and just restarting as soon as I got spark again. So now I've got a problem. I first checked all the work I did and everything looks good. Then I start searching on here for possible causes.
The search reveals, CPS, TPS, LAS (Lean Angle Sensor), as leading possiblities. My mods didn't really mess with any of these other than the fact that the PC3 is interacting with the TPS. I found a post that said that the LAS is located near the rear horn, so I thought maybe I screwed it up with the bike jack somehow. I unplugged the LAS and when it came off the little black sheath around the wires poured out about a teaspoon of water. Those sheaths don't seal up at the connector, and mine was positioned with a loop in it so that it held water. I'm thinking that at 80 mph I got enough pressure or suction to move the water out of the loop and into the back of the LAS connector, which activated it. I blew the wires & connector with a hair dryer and went for a 30 mile ride. No problem. Went for another 50 mile today. No problem.
So it SEEMS like my problem was water pooled up near the LAS, but conventional problem-solving would suggest that if you change a whole bunch of stuff, and then immediately start having a problem, the problem is related to the changes. In my case the LAS and water was completely unrelated to the changes, so I'm having trouble convincing myself that my problem is actually gone. What do you think? Anybody have any other guesses on what this might be?
JamieB