wot a nightmare..............
buy a 1200..................................![]()





) so that means getting the angle grinder out (hey, it's all precision engineering here!!) to cut a bit off next door's zimmer frame.

Just because the lambda voltage seen on a serial output is dead, it does not mean that the sensor is not working. Have you checked with a meter or scope between the black wire and earth?
Lastly, if you must fit a universal sensor then at least fit a Bosch one.
Too late.....got a generic 'universal' one (mobletron branded but could be manufactured by someone else)Your bike has a dreadful reputation for surging and you compromise on the most important part in the mixture control system under cruise conditions![]()
If the ecu is looking for a co pot instead of a lambda sensor, the displayed output will stay constant.
Sensor outputs and serial data are not the same.
or you're right about the serial output part of it
True on this bike. I don't think there are any sensors clever enough to provide serial data to this bike and be read by the ECU.
Typical Lambda voltage graphs
There is NO PERFECT graph... which is why we CANNOT give you a reference graph with the instructions : "This is what it should look like, and if it does not EXACTLY look like this, then there is a problem!". However, once you understand the basic functioning, you can make an educated decision on the appropriateness and correctness of what you are seeing in the graphs...! In general the narrow-band Lambda sensors can measure only a small region either side of the Stoichiometric ratio, and there voltage outputs are limited to a region between zero and 1 Volt. The output is generally given as a milli-Volt (mV) value.
The Electronic Control unit (ECU) measures the Lambda voltage and uses this to systematically increase the injector pulse width (thus the effective amount of fuel), until it rises above a set average above the nominal operating point... Once it reaches this "richer" maximum setting, it starts decreasing the base value of the injector pulse until it reaches a minimum "lean threshold" before it starts repeating the cycle again in so doing the ECU tries to maintain the Air-Fuel ratio at its predetermined set-point, by perturbating around the predetermined set-point...
Armed with the above knowledge, as well as knowing that some ECUs have minimum set-points of 150 or 200mV and maximum set-points ranging from 600mV to a very common 700mV, some going as high as 800mV, we can use this to make a general but educated decision on the validity of the Lambda sensor voltage signal.
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I'm not pretending to understand the difference between serial data and what the 911 was interpreting into its graph, I'm going to look it up tomorrow and get my head around it, but according to the 911 people:
I do know that the 911 software was showing a flatline, and should have been showing something more like this as the ECU received signals telling it to ferk around with the mixture though (you can tell I'm right up on this level of tech babble, can't you)
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EDIT...I guess that's pretty much what you just said while I was typingAnd yes, I agree, it's unlikely to SOLVE the overall problem, but even if it doesn't, it's another box ticked off
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I'm no expert, but I'm curious (and probably know just enough to be dangerous...)
Ditchwater, are you suggesting (as alternatives to a failed lambda sensor giving a constant output):
a) The Motronic is not reading the lambda sensor value, and is instead reporting a substituted constant (e.g. lookup table value it is defaulting to) to the 911 over serial diagnostics?
b) The Motronic is not running closed-loop, so isn't adjusting the mixture via the lambda sensor (which will probably produce a near-constant output depending on the open-loop mixture rather than the normal oscillation of the closed-loop feedback).
It should be possible to get the raw lambda output using a multimeter, but that's only interesting (if at all) if very different to what the 911 reads from the ECU. Do the diagnostics on the 1150 Motronic allow a 911 to tell whether the mixture setting is indeed closed-loop via the lambda sensor? Is there a fault code for lambda failure?
Have you tried the bike after removing the valve heads? it could well be the cause of your problems and the now its ok now its not symptoms. Blocked cats are common on cars.


. If it is having to substitute data then an error code will be flagged for the sensor concerned.
Have you tried the bike after removing the valve heads? it could well be the cause of your problems and the now its ok now its not symptoms. Blocked cats are common on cars.
)Despite my earlier comments, a dead lambda sensor shouldn't affect high speed operation.