Hi all. I have a 2007 R1200R (recent purchase) in addition to my GSA. (I know, I know, it's not a GS but is essentially the exact same....)
I noticed that it can be a bit lumpy at times (idles ok but the occasional hiccup) especially when hot.
Anyway, I ran a GS-911 autoscan and found that Lambda (O2) sensor cylinder 1 was faulty. I ordered a (used) replacement. It arrived and I removed the lefthand O2 probe (assuming it was cylinder 1) and replaced. No change. Same fault still occurred on GS-911. I then discovered that Cylinder 1 is actually the right hand cylinder to I went to replace the RH one (with the previous O2 sensor I had removed from LHS).
Anyway, to cut a long story short, previous owner(s) had done a bit of a botch job. The RHS O2 sensor block-connector had been cut off and a homemade loom made with soldered joints now connected the O2 sensor to the bike’s loom.
I remade a new ‘loom’ to connect the O2 sensor as per the wiring diagram in the Haynes manual.
All seems good. Proper soldered connections etc.
I reset the adaptations etc, started the bike and the fault still exists – and looking at the realtime O2 values, it seems that cylinder 1 is still the same – ie showing a constant low voltage value, while cylinder 2 flicks high and low.
So all I can now think of is that there may be damage to the loom between the point of connection and the ECU. All wiring colours match – I ran the O2 heaters test via GS-911 and they both ran perfectly.
Anyone got any thoughts on this ? I assume I should bell-out the loom to the ECU multi-connector
Thanks
Fergus
I noticed that it can be a bit lumpy at times (idles ok but the occasional hiccup) especially when hot.
Anyway, I ran a GS-911 autoscan and found that Lambda (O2) sensor cylinder 1 was faulty. I ordered a (used) replacement. It arrived and I removed the lefthand O2 probe (assuming it was cylinder 1) and replaced. No change. Same fault still occurred on GS-911. I then discovered that Cylinder 1 is actually the right hand cylinder to I went to replace the RH one (with the previous O2 sensor I had removed from LHS).
Anyway, to cut a long story short, previous owner(s) had done a bit of a botch job. The RHS O2 sensor block-connector had been cut off and a homemade loom made with soldered joints now connected the O2 sensor to the bike’s loom.
I remade a new ‘loom’ to connect the O2 sensor as per the wiring diagram in the Haynes manual.
All seems good. Proper soldered connections etc.
I reset the adaptations etc, started the bike and the fault still exists – and looking at the realtime O2 values, it seems that cylinder 1 is still the same – ie showing a constant low voltage value, while cylinder 2 flicks high and low.
So all I can now think of is that there may be damage to the loom between the point of connection and the ECU. All wiring colours match – I ran the O2 heaters test via GS-911 and they both ran perfectly.
Anyone got any thoughts on this ? I assume I should bell-out the loom to the ECU multi-connector
Thanks
Fergus



