Well I was really bummed out the other day when suddenly my 2017 DSR had no power and was completely dead when I turned on the key. I had just had the 600 mile motor commissioning performed the day before and rode the bike to work like I normally do. The battery was very low so I plugged it into the 120V outlet in the parking garage next to where I park my bike. The outlet has a timer on it since it's also used to recharge a couple of electric bicycles my department has.
To make a long story short, I went down to check the progress later that day after about 6-hours of charging (the max amount on the timer) and bike was at 96%. I decide to turn the timer back on for a few more minutes to top it off, but you have to turn the dial past 1-hour and then back again and in doing so I think I turned it completely off and then back on very quickly. I heard a strange noise that didn't sound normal and when I looked at the instrument panel it was completely blank and the ready light was blinking rapidly and flashing on and off every couple of seconds. When I turned the key to on there was no change. Everything was dead. The flashing ready light was the only sign of life. It was as if the contactor was stuck open. I suspected that one of the high voltage fuses may have blown and cut power to the contactor.
The next day I contacted Tim with Electronic Art in Cincinnati (where I purchased the bike) and he was kind enough to come out to where I work and take a look. We took the seat off and checked a couple of the 12V fuses, but they were all okay. We then began to check the high voltage fuses starting with the easiest one which is identified as #1 on page 6.30 of the owner’s manual and controls the Low Power B+ circuit. Tim unscrewed the cap and pulled out the ceramic fuse. We didn’t have a continuity tester, but it look okay in that there weren’t any visible signs that it had blown. Tim reinserted the fuse and when he did we heard the contractor click as if it had reset. Sure enough, when I turned the key on, the bike powered up normally and was working fine again.
So there you have it. If you ever get into a situation similar to mine where the contactor appears to be stuck open and the bike has no power at all, try removing and reinserting the high voltage fuse #1 to reset the contractor. I've attached a snippet from the BMM log that shows what happened.
BTW, when I tried to print out the log file the line numbers were all jumbled up and didn’t look anything like the log parser preview screen. Does anyone know of a way to fix that? I'd also appreciate if someone could point me to some instructions for how to embed an image into a post.
Edit: Sorry I attached the wrong snippet from the log and the actual log that covers the time period in question is too long and I don't know how to attach it.