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  # 1  
Old 21-04-16, 09:27
Deke Deke is offline
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Fuze blowing

Ok so I was on my way home from work yesterday taking the scenic route as it was nice.
Suddenly the bike died, and would not start again, it would turn over but wasn't starting.
Tried a few things no luck so called out the RAC guy, he came and started checking fuses, found one that was dead, replaced it with a spare I didn't even know i had and it started straight away.
He did mention it could be a ongoing problem and i might need to see to it, and he was right as it did the same on the way to work this morning, so swapped for my other spare.
I'm not sure i have another spare, so where would i buy one (some)?

And has anybody any idea what it could be?

I realise it's a bit vague but any help would be appreciated

I'll try and trace where the fuse goes later on.

doug
  # 2  
Old 21-04-16, 09:34
Pleiades Pleiades is offline
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Fuze blowing

If the fuse keeps blowing then the RAC man is right: you have an underlying problem and it will need looking in to.

For a starter, it would help to know which fuse is blowing. Which number is it in the fuse box? What colour/rating is it?

Fuses can be found in most garages and car parts shops like Halfords.
  # 3  
Old 21-04-16, 10:06
Deke Deke is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Pleiades View Post
If the fuse keeps blowing then the RAC man is right: you have an underlying problem and it will need looking in to.

For a starter, it would help to know which fuse is blowing. Which number is it in the fuse box? What colour/rating is it?

Fuses can be found in most garages and car parts shops like Halfords.
Hi Pleiades,

Thanks again for the quick reply

I believe it was the number '10' and I think it was red/orange?
I'll have a look at lunch as i have the tenere manual.pdf as a guide too.

I also need to invest in a pocket tester/multimeter, anyone got a link to a cheap one? EDIT: Never mind, I ordered one from Screwfix, along with some fuses

Last edited by Deke; 21-04-16 at 12:57.
  # 4  
Old 21-04-16, 13:53
Deke Deke is offline
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Maybe the radiator fan motor

I've had a look at the fuse box and compared it to what it shows in the manual, and it looks like it could be the Radiator fan motor fuse that is playing up.

It was the 1st time i've left the bike out in the sun yesterday and then with the warm weather we had...
Does this make sense?
Could it cause it?
  # 5  
Old 21-04-16, 21:45
Pleiades Pleiades is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Deke View Post
I've had a look at the fuse box and compared it to what it shows in the manual, and it looks like it could be the Radiator fan motor fuse that is playing up.

It was the 1st time i've left the bike out in the sun yesterday and then with the warm weather we had...
Does this make sense?
Could it cause it?
Possibly, but not all that likely. The fan load is the only thing supplied by this fuse (which is number 6 - brown 7.5A) and shouldn't really affect anything else. However, if the fan relay is goosed (and causing the fuse to blow) there is a slight chance that other circuits could be affected as the relay's positive trigger feed is linked to the start inhibit system, dash, coil etc. and the negative is switched by the engine temperature sensor via the ECU. The internal diode (connected in parallel across the trigger +/- takes up the energy stored in the relay's coil when current is removed. Without the diode, that energy has no place to go and will cause a potentially damaging voltage spike.

Firstly, are you absolutely sure it is fuse #6? If it is, then what I would do is pull the fan relay from its socket and see if the bike runs without blowing the fuse. Obviously you don't want to be riding in traffic without the fan in operation and keep an eye on the temperature warning light. (If you can get hold of a diagnostic tool you could run the fan relay test.) If it still blows without the relay in place then there'll be a wiring fault and a short to ground somewhere. You'll have to trace the wiring and see if you can find anything amiss. If the fuse doesn't blow, then refit the relay and try disconnecting the fan and see what happens which should tell you whether the fan or relay is at fault. As I said though, I can't see why the fan itself would cause a non-running situation.
  # 6  
Old 22-04-16, 09:20
Deke Deke is offline
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I got home ok last night and back into work today with no trouble.

I did notice yesterday that the fan on the radiator wasn't spinning, and it was after a 5 mile journey in warm weather, is that normal?

i've taken a photo of the fuse box, it's the 5th one down i changed yesterday (i'm not 100% sure that was the same one that the RAC guy changed it, could have been the 4th one)
I've circled it, the 7.5 was the only spare i had so i used that to replace the 10.
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File Type: jpg fuse2.jpg (201.2 KB, 15 views)
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