I have a 2009 Buell XB12Ss Lightning Long with 13.5K miles on it. Jardine exhaust, EBR ECM.
Went out for a ride today, everything seemed OK. Drove like 30 minutes, turned the bike off for an hour, then went riding again.
At the furthest point of my ride, the bike starting running a little more rough/vibrating at cruising speed. Then it started hesitating and surging. I turned the throttle and the bike would not pull forward like usual, instead it would bog down. It was accompanied by a low but loud burbling noise from the exhaust.
I got really worried that I was not going to make it home. I coasted back home in the right lane at about 50mph, selecting the highest gear possible and keeping it around 2K RPM.
The whole way back the bike was not comfortable with me twisting the throttle, and it would bog down and burble loudly if I twisted the throttle too much.
Anyway, I made it home in one peace. Gave her a pat on the the air box, and thanked my lucky stars that I did not break down on the highway and I did not need to call a tow truck.
I have had the bike for 6 years, and it has been a dream. I'm not sure exactly what the problem is.
Is anyone knowledgeable of what the problem may be?
A while back I was popping fuel pump fuses. I haven't popped one in over 2 years. At the time I brought a new fuel pump because I was paranoid it would be a problem in the future. I have it sitting in my garage.
Sounds like the issues I had just before I found out my ECM was junk. Take your seat off, start the bike, and tap your ECM a few times with your knuckle. If the bike dies, you need a new ECM. Common issue with Ulys. Dunno about a Lightning Long but I believe the ECM is in the same location on them. If this is the case, relocate the ECM to somewhere it's not getting tapped or rubbed on by the seat or other parts.
If it is the ecm, then the solder on the connector is broken! Might be able to fix it but it's an ugly repair because the plastic needs to be cut away.
The filter is part of the major fuel pump assembly, so it depends what you actually bought. If you just have a small round cylinder pump, then the filter is not part of this. If you have the pump assembly that bolts right in place in the tank, then you should have new filter and input strainer.
A fuel pressure gauge inline and where you can see it when you ride. Connect it and check pressure at idle, then go for a short ride and note the pressure when the engine struggles.
I'd send the injectors out for service, I used FIC when I did the top end on my 9r and everything came back fine.
So I checked the throttle body intake butterfly valve, it opens and closes and looks perfectly functional.
I took the bike out for a test ride locally this morning. It started out ok, just a little off, but then as the bike got warmer the hesitation began again and I was getting more decel popping the longer I rode.
I winded out to like 5K RPM and was able to replicate the choking accompanied with stutter. Although, it was not as bad as yesterday. I am positive that if I take it on a longer ride at higher speeds, the bogging down will occur as bad as it did yesterday though.
My attention will now shift on the fuel pump. Being that I have a spare assembly in my garage, I believe replacing it will be the best route at this point.
Greg_e, I know you mentioned fuel injectors and fuel lines being clogged. If the assembly swap doesn't work, I will look there. I just find it hard to believe that they would be clogged since I have 13.5k miles and I only use 93 octane and Amsoil. But it's possible.
Do you think I should flush out my lines and change my injectors while I have the gas drained and the fuel pump out?
Does it get worse when it gets hotter? I can't say for sure. I know it gets worse the longer I ride. I don't know whether the bike feeling hot is caused by an underlying problem or whether it is causing a problem.
"It runs good cold." - I would not say that. It runs better cold, but it is still not right. Feels rough, and lacking power at first. It gets progressively worse the longer I ride, until its flat out choking. When it happened yesterday, the bike had been parked for like 5 days and not used. The choking came on when I was deep into my ride. When I rode my bike today, the choking began within 5 minutes.
Can you hear the pump prime up when you turn on the run switch? - Yes, it primes, always.
I am really leaning toward something being wrong in the fuel pump assembly. Especially since I used to pop fuses like popcorn. Do you guys feel that the fuse popping is significant in any way?
With ECM Droid, when you turn the throttle does the bar look like it's lagging? It should be super smooth and move with very fine throttle twists. My TPS sensor went and I had similar symptoms. But then again my ecm also went and it had the same symptoms.
I'm in left field but I had a Guzzi with "tank suck" that did that.. the tank was not venting so a vacuum built up and prevented the fuel from flowing out the tank.
That a good point and easy to check. If it gets better if you leave the filler open, your vent might be clogged.
But it is sounding like it could be something in the pump. Is the pump louder than it used to be? They often get louder before failing. Blowing fuse could just be a chafed wired where it enter the tank.
I am expecting to find chafed wires when I pull the pump this weekend.
One of my concerns is, when I reinstall the new assembly, how can I go about protecting it from going bad again? Protecting the wires, adding Mystery Oil with each fill up? IDK....
Posted on Wednesday, September 16, 2015 - 07:30 am:
Cable ties inside should be enough, the insulation normally breaks right where it goes into the aluminum mounting plate.
One you get the old assembly out, might be worth rebuilding it to keep on the shelf or sell for a decent price. Or just sell it saying it needs to be rebuilt. I have an extra, so if my pump goes bad again, I can rebuild the extra again and just swap assemblies. Probably never happen again, but you never know.
Posted on Wednesday, September 16, 2015 - 10:36 am:
The chaffing wires issue was the older fuel pumps, I'm yet to see an 09 that had that happen. There was a batch of 09 pumps that would blow the fuse on hot days with low fuel levels, but it was not an issue with chaffing. The fix is to replace the pump.
If you have the means, please record some data. It's more of a long shot since it won't start now, but we might get lucky. And if it does run, even for only a few seconds, the data might give a clue.
Posted on Saturday, September 19, 2015 - 11:06 am:
That's plenty of cranking to start it, so something is definitely wrong.
The backfire when you turn on the ignition makes me think the crank position sensor might be worth looking at next. Without a scope you will have a hard time testing it thoroughly, but you can at least see if it goes low then high then low again.
Posted on Saturday, September 19, 2015 - 03:23 pm:
I put a new battery today and made sure the Spark plug boots were firmly seated, clipped on.
The bike turned over, all seemed well. I went for a 45 minute ride and explored the entire rev range.
The hesitation at around 2k rpm slowly started creeping back. I pulled over, did a TPS reset, and rode more. The hesitation returned, and it felt like it was getting progressively more pronounced.
Exhaust was getting a little louder than usual, the bike felt vibraty and rough, and the power was being interrupted.
P.S. - I have now joined forces with a fellow Bueller who is quiet knowledgeable and will help me with repairs. Together with the input from this thread, I hope this can be solved.