That looks like a manufacturing defect to me.
Even with production under cleanroom conditions you still have a (albeit very low) fault quota. So to speak, you won the lottery
Yeah, I think so too. I see two possibilities:
1.The fuse element was too tight, so even a change in weather can make it break.
2. The element wasn't crimped down correctly on one side.
I would say the evidence points to number 2. I say that because the element was broken at the very end, probably just fell out. I suppose it could still be weather related, but there has to be more than just that.
The strange thing is the bike has not been moved even a microinch when it decided to break.
Much more likely to break while riding by hitting a bump on the road or whatever.
What surprises me that there is a fuse not even mentioned in the PDF service manual that can totally kill the bike and we do not have easy excess to it.
But yeah, I assume it's very rare for this to happen or I would not have been the first here to discover such. I wonder if the newer "+" models also have this same fuse.
BTW, getting all the covers off is easy and straightforward and doesn't take long. But I wouldn't want to do it on the side of the road but even that would still be possible with the correct tools. Mainly two sizes of Allan wrenches and a flush cutter to cut the strap on the fuse holder.
But even better would be to do what I did and relocate this fuse. Then no tools are needed.
-Don- Reno, NV