Street Triple 675r 2013 Trouble.

Discussion in 'Technical Help' started by DP&TC, Jul 12, 2023.

  1. DP&TC

    DP&TC New Member

    Jun 19, 2023
    3
    3
    Stockport
    Hi,

    Anyone have any suggestions on an issue experienced today?
    When accelerating past a car today, the blue rev limiter lights illuminated to indicate revs were high as they normally do, however the bike started to violently cough, drop revs and the bike was twitching and shaking a lot for a second or two. Then it went ok, as soon as the revs dropped. If I accelerate hard, it does the same every time.
    Any advise please. its very worrying and I only recently bought it from a friend.

    thanks DP
     
  2. Adie P

    Adie P Crème de la Crème

    Jul 7, 2018
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    DP.

    First - the blue revs-linked lights can be configured in different ways, i.e. to come on in a number of ways at different stages. Check the handbook to see how to change the mode in which they operate. Ask your friend, also, if he made any changes to the shift pattern lights.

    This doesn't address the 'twitching and shaking' issue, of course, which is not necessarily directly related to the lights' indications. The symptoms you describe COULD be that the bike has had the rev limiter set low which COULD also link to the blue lights setting. My advice would be to check, first, the handbook for these two settings and see if you can configure them differently.

    If that doesn't get you anywhere then you might want to have the on-board diagnostics checked by a local dealer/mechanic.

    Hope you sort it and enjoy it in 'full operating mode' soon!
     
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  3. andyc1

    andyc1 Lunarville 7, Airlock 3

    Feb 4, 2017
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    The blue lights are just a shift indicator and have no effect on the rev limiter regardless of when they are set to come on. It sounds more like fuel starvation which could be the fuel filter or perhaps a blocked fuel tank breather pipe.
     
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  4. DP&TC

    DP&TC New Member

    Jun 19, 2023
    3
    3
    Stockport
    Thank you very much
     
  5. DP&TC

    DP&TC New Member

    Jun 19, 2023
    3
    3
    Stockport
    Thanks very much
     
  6. learningtofly

    learningtofly He’s not the Messiah, he’s a very naughty boy!
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    Sep 25, 2018
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    Precisely the symptoms I had on my Bonnie recently. Turned out to be fuel starvation arising from a kinked fuel line.
     
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  7. DP&TC

    DP&TC New Member

    Jun 19, 2023
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    3
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    Thanks for that, did it happen when accelerating hard, but in normal running, it was ok?
     
  8. learningtofly

    learningtofly He’s not the Messiah, he’s a very naughty boy!
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    Sep 25, 2018
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    Yep, exactly that.
     
  9. Eldon

    Eldon Elite Member

    Nov 14, 2018
    6,189
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    North Yorkshire
    #9 Eldon, Jul 13, 2023
    Last edited: Jul 13, 2023
    @DP&TC I had a Yamaha 600 back in 2010 and took it to the Manx GP. Now this bike was an infrequent commuter plus a toy but was 100% reliable yet as soon as it got going on that trip it was useless.
    We arrived at 06.00 on day one and went for a quick lap before breakfast :yum
    ....... err nope, not quick, as it cut out a few times when running for sustained periods of 10k and wouldn't re- start, yet 10 minutes later all good.
    I went to the Yamaha dealer and had it stripped down, on the pavement by his front door, ready for when he opened up. I bought a new fuel filter and fitted it, then carefully cut the old one apart for inspection.
    It looked perfect with absolutely nothing to see but was the complete culprit.

    Easy solution once pinpointed and inadequate flow rate sounds your issue ;)
     
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  10. DP&TC

    DP&TC New Member

    Jun 19, 2023
    3
    3
    Stockport
    Thanks - I have identified the fault.
    Thanks to all for your ideas,
    The problem was the rider (me). The way I was riding and the way I positioned my foot near the gear lever was the problem.
    Inadvertently, I was lightly lifting the lever, not enough to change gear, but enough for the quick-shifter to think something was going happen. I have replicated the fault a few times on demand.
    I have now repositioned my foot away from the gear lever and... perfect, no issues whatsoever :eek::joy:
     
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  11. Adie P

    Adie P Crème de la Crème

    Jul 7, 2018
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    Aaahh...... now, you see, you didn't mention the bike has a QS! They are, as you've found, extremely sensitive and you do have to be very careful about resting your foot on or near the gearshift pedal.

    I found much the same problem with my 2010 after fitting and using a QS for the first time - I'd obviously been in the habit of changing gear then leaving my foot resting close to the pedal ........ close enough for even the slightest of contact to operate the QS's ignition kill function momentarily!

    Glad it's all sorted for you. Enjoy.
     
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  12. DP&TC

    DP&TC New Member

    Jun 19, 2023
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    3
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    Thanks - the organic bit struck again. Bike great - rider not so... :)
     
  13. Eldon

    Eldon Elite Member

    Nov 14, 2018
    6,189
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    North Yorkshire
    Umm now you mention QS it puts a different slant on things.
    The only time I've had a problem with mine was when I had my little lad on the back and he sat really close in so we were both in the front seat. My operation of the gear lever, albeit from a slightly different seating position to normal, wasn't positive and confident, a sort of soft stroke rather than a firm movement. Other than the above scenario my QS has been 100% reliable when on my own or with adult passengers.

    Is it worth considering your gear lever positioning, where maybe a minor adjustment could prove beneficial?

    Presumably your QS is only on the upshift so concentrate on the relationship with your foot beneath the lever.
     
  14. DP&TC

    DP&TC New Member

    Jun 19, 2023
    3
    3
    Stockport
    Im sure i can reposition it pal - i have repositioned my foot when riding and its 100% - just the tit thats rising it caused the problem - the bike is fantastic
     
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