Details for the enquiring minds:
- Relevant fuses check out good (2 -- a 30 Amp on the starter relay assembly and a 10 Amp in the fuse box)
- Behavior is the same with fuses replaced.
- I did not find any fusible links.
- The battery was disconnected at the positive terminal for periods ranging from 30 s to 30 min. with no change in behavior.
- The battery says about 12.7 V, disconnected from everything (and not running, obviously)
- Per the shop manual test the starter relay checks out as bad. I.e. no continuity through the switched circuit when 12 V is passed through the appropriate switching contacts.
- The starter relay assembly -- AFAI can tell -- also doubles as an 'integrated junction box' for the wiring that supplies electricity to the rest of the bike. (I'm not 100% certain on that as I haven't studied the wiring diagram yet.) So, there are 6 wires coming out of it and it has a 30 Amp fuse.
- 'No nothing coming on' means nothing showing on the gauges when the key is turned to 'on'; no lights at all, no elements darkened for any of the LCDs.
- The headlights are not wired up. (Last ride for the bike was at the track.)
- The rear tail light assembly is an integrated LED jobby, aftermarket I believe and installed by the PO. At purchase time it worked properly but at some time after that one rear turn signal ceased to operate.
- The regulator / rectifier checks out as good with the multi-way diode test. (Does that test have a name?)
- The connector from the regulator to the harness is toast along with an inch-ish of wiring from the connector. Both halves of the connector are brittle and one half has missing chunks. Upon disconnecting the regulator at the connector the worse half (the half on the harness) partially disintegrated and the contacts fell out from their normal places.
- Two smaller wires appear to have been placed into or built into the worse half of the connector -- wire in addition to the normal 5 (the 3 from the stator and 2 to the bike). I'm not sure what they go to yet but they were broken by the time I had disconnected the regulator.
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Thoughts:
Maybe there was some shortcut performed when the tail lights were installed that over time cooked the connector and eventually resulted in an intermittent short that somehow damaged the starter relay assembly. This would be more believable if the starter relay assy has some electronic components inside such as diodes, etc. If the two unidentified wires *should* have been in the connector like they seem to have been it's possible that one or both of these is necessary for the bike to run and maybe one or both of them fried before today.
I didn't think about slapping the relay. I'll give it a go, but right now I'm guessing there's a fried component inside it if the problem isn't simply at the fried connector.
I think that momentary (prolly about 1 s) was just the final straw of using that sent it over the edge.
I think Sister did her a huge favor 'cause this could have failed way out of town somewhere and diagnosing and/or repairing it on the road would have been tough-to-impossible.
Oh yeah, Sister is indeed hawt too. I saw the pics.

arty