Lol. That would help yes. It’s a 1981 xs650 special. No pics right now and not at home.Welcome! It may help if you share the year model or a pic of your stator
Yep, that's one scenario that comes to mind: on a "late-model", Type A regulator system, the brown brush wire carries switched, fused 12volts and must be isolated from ground. If it was inadvertently grounded to the stator housing, it would blow a fuse (perhaps brown or main depending on where spliced) and disable the ignition circuit. Other possibilities existFuse !
I checked the fuse. Ignition one was good .Fuse !
So your saying check that the brush wire itself didn’t somehow ground against the stator? I didn’t see any blown fuse. I’ll double check both of those options, thanksYep, that's one scenario that comes to mind: on a "late-model", Type A regulator system, the brown brush wire carries switched, fused 12volts and must be isolated from ground. If it was inadvertently grounded to the stator housing, it would blow a fuse (perhaps brown or main depending on where spliced) and disable the ignition circuit. Other possibilities exist
Looks like what I remember doing . I’ll take a pic and post incase someone sees something I have missed.I did a “slap test” and it was magneticbrush wires should be routed like this.
View attachment 250911
I’ll check the battery. Should be ok . It was brand new. Never cranked it with wires off plugs . Had the plug grounded against frame to check spark when it wouldn’t fire . How would I test the pickup on the outside of the stator. That box is rarely mentioned or discussed. And I don’t see them forsale anywhere.Battery charged up? Both spark plugs must be attached to the plug leads and grounded any time the motor is cranked over.
Don't think the sidestand ignition interlock switch came along till the 1982 Heritage special.
They're rarely the problem (hence little discussion). Easy enough to check: white/red wire & white/green wire at the stator block connector should be ~ 700 Ohms between each one of those and the white/black wire.How would I test the pickup on the outside of the stator. That box is rarely mentioned or discussed. And I don’t see them forsale anywhere.
Sounds good. Thank you for the advice. I’ll let you know what I findThey're rarely the problem (hence little discussion). Easy enough to check: white/red wire & white/green wire at the stator block connector should be ~ 700 Ohms between each one of those and the white/black wire.
While you have the multi-meter out, I'd check for voltage at the ignition coil on the Red/white wire