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VSS fault - Spyder not starting

leo76dragon

New member
Hello All,
I am in search of a solution to get my Spyder started... I have only 700 miles on my Phantom Spyder and it won't start... I'm getting a VSS fault when I try to start my Spyder and it doesnt start..... the engine can rotate over and then just cuts off.... I'm hoping that if I take it to the dealer he doesnt blame my light modifications, and or kewlmetal intake... any suggestions would be great... thank you!
:helpsmilie:

Dennis
 
Make sure any acessories ( fog lights, etc) are turned off. Mine was very picky about starting with them on.
 
Are you sure you have a fully charged battery? That would be my first guess.
:agree: The battery voltage should be at least 12.6 volts (after sitting a while, not fresh off the charger), if the battery is at full charge and capable of holding a charge. If it is properly charged, do a load test. The battery should not drop below 10 volts while cranking, or after being placed on a load tester.
 
I had a similar problem last year - it was the battery terminals - they need to be real snug. Good luck finding the problem - it sounds electrical and prob. minor.
 
One more thought

As others have suggested, check the battery. I love my Tenders; and have them on every vehicle. Recently though I had a green light situation when the battery was not charged. :yikes: I trust the Tender so much I didn't check the battery directly. The light would go green almost immediately, but the battery would only crank a moment or two and would not start the motorcycle. The battery was 8 years old so I just "assumed" it was bad and replaced it. The new battery worked fine but soon acted as though it was weak even though the Tender showed a green light. It turns out that there was corrosion on the in line fuse of the Tender. :opps: As soon as I cleaned the corrosion off the fuse, the Tender went back to charging. I think my eight year old battery was fine, but I had already taken it to be recycled. :( Live and learn, or not.
I hope this helps. :thumbup:
 
I had a similar problem when my ryde was new. After the dealers replaced the battery and the starter, to no effect, they finally had to replace the tight bearings in the starter drive train. All on warrantee, thank goodness.
 
Hi everyone,
Thank you for your responses, I will go and check the connections, and the ground wire from the coil as Lamonster and Evan is suggesting, however, I was able to start up the bike after 2 tries, and when it started up the engine was running at 2000 RPMS, then when I throttled it, it jumped to 7000 RPMS, and couldnt come down... so I just shut it off... and now I'm even more perplexed... why would the throttle be stuck?


thanks
Dennis
 
Hi everyone,
Thank you for your responses, I will go and check the connections, and the ground wire from the coil as Lamonster and Evan is suggesting, however, I was able to start up the bike after 2 tries, and when it started up the engine was running at 2000 RPMS, then when I throttled it, it jumped to 7000 RPMS, and couldnt come down... so I just shut it off... and now I'm even more perplexed... why would the throttle be stuck?
Low battery can do that, too. It screws up the ECM and the sensor voltages. I'd suggest you remove the bodywork, remove & clean the battery connections (at the battery), then reconnect and fully charge the battery. If you have a multimeter available, check battery voltages as in my post above. If the voltages aren't up to snuff after all that, replace the battery. If the battery charges and tests OK, get the Spyder to your dealer for diagnostics and repairs.
 
Low battery can do that, too. It screws up the ECM and the sensor voltages. I'd suggest you remove the bodywork, remove & clean the battery connections (at the battery), then reconnect and fully charge the battery. If you have a multimeter available, check battery voltages as in my post above. If the voltages aren't up to snuff after all that, replace the battery. If the battery charges and tests OK, get the Spyder to your dealer for diagnostics and repairs.


ok, I disconnected both HID foglights, but left the HID headlights plugged in, it started up fine... shut it down... plugged both foglights back in again, and it couldnt start up (VSS fault)... disconnected the foglights, it started up... but with the RPMS running high again... shut it down... checked the battery with the volt meter... its giving me a reading 13.78, turn the spyder off, it gives me a reading for 13.1... so battery looks pretty good.... may be a ground issue with the coil and ballasts of both headlight/foglight HIDs as Evan suggested... got any suggestions on how to add the ground wire?...

thanks
Dennis
 
ok, I disconnected both HID foglights, but left the HID headlights plugged in, it started up fine... shut it down... plugged both foglights back in again, and it couldnt start up (VSS fault)... disconnected the foglights, it started up... but with the RPMS running high again... shut it down... checked the battery with the volt meter... its giving me a reading 13.78, turn the spyder off, it gives me a reading for 13.1... so battery looks pretty good.... may be a ground issue with the coil and ballasts of both headlight/foglight HIDs as Evan suggested... got any suggestions on how to add the ground wire?...

thanks
Dennis
Sounds like an HID foglight ballast(s) may be bad. If this was not a new installation, you had no ground problems before. If you do ground the ballasts to try to cure the problem, be sure and run all the way back to the main frame ground, or a ground bus connected to the main ground. Should be able to tie a #14-12 ground wire to a mounting bolt on each ballast, then run a similar drop to ground. Hope the ground wiring cures your problem.
 
I went thru all of this a few months ago. If my ballasts touched the frame or any metal, the VSS code and everything else would freak out. I wound up mounting the ballasts up high under the instrument console, to the plastic and didnt have any other issues. Mounting the ballasts on the back side of the trunk works well too. I did the ground wire thing, changed out ballasts and everything else and none of that worked. An easy test is to remove your ballasts from theirmounting spot and place them off the spyder and try to start it. That was how I found the grounding problem with mine.
 
I went thru all of this a few months ago. If my ballasts touched the frame or any metal, the VSS code and everything else would freak out. I wound up mounting the ballasts up high under the instrument console, to the plastic and didnt have any other issues. Mounting the ballasts on the back side of the trunk works well too. I did the ground wire thing, changed out ballasts and everything else and none of that worked. An easy test is to remove your ballasts from theirmounting spot and place them off the spyder and try to start it. That was how I found the grounding problem with mine.

thanks Dave,
I'll try remounting the 4 ballasts some other place, right now I have them all mounted together on the front part of the frame... should I try to separate them? I will try that, since that is the easiest thing right now.... I'm hoping that will work...

thanks
Dennis
 
well, I relocated the ballasts to the upper portion of the console.... it's not touching any part of the frame... or any of the other ballasts... battery connections is good... battery tested ok per Scotty's suggestions... and I have tried different things... :dontknow:

1. start with foglights disconnected -starts normal
2. start with foglights on - VSS fault
3. start with foglights off, but then turn on foglights - it dies and gives me a VSS fault error
4. start with foglights off - starts normal, after throttling... engine RPMs shoots up to 4000 RPMS, then 5000 RPMS, and does not come down...

I may have bad ballasts on either the headlights or foglights... I guess
next thing I have to try is the ground wire suggestion from Evan... and I am waiting for a response from Andrew at Custom Dynamics...

thank you for your assistance everyone...

Dennis
 
well, I relocated the ballasts to the upper portion of the console.... it's not touching any part of the frame... or any of the other ballasts... battery connections is good... battery tested ok per Scotty's suggestions... and I have tried different things... :dontknow:

1. start with foglights disconnected -starts normal
2. start with foglights on - VSS fault
3. start with foglights off, but then turn on foglights - it dies and gives me a VSS fault error
4. start with foglights off - starts normal, after throttling... engine RPMs shoots up to 4000 RPMS, then 5000 RPMS, and does not come down...

I may have bad ballasts on either the headlights or foglights... I guess
next thing I have to try is the ground wire suggestion from Evan... and I am waiting for a response from Andrew at Custom Dynamics...

thank you for your assistance everyone...

Dennis
I would be surprised if the headlight ballasts were bad, with these foglight specific symptoms. If you have a heavy jumper wire with alligator clips at each end, you can test grounding them without a lot of effort.
 
I know it is gonna get figured out!

I have nothing to bring to this post other than to say I am always amazed at what people know about things. You may as well be speaking Japanese when it comes to this diagnosing and fixing this electrical stuff but I have no doubt, you guys know what you are talking about and will fix the problem. :2thumbs: A bunch of great guys and gals here!
 
keep the ballast and wires away from the bike frame

okay... so I called a buddy of mine who is an electronic engineer here in Silicon Valley to help me figure out this grounding issue... and what we discovered is that the wires coming from the ballast to the foglights has so much "noise" that is messes up the computer system in the spyder causing it to shut down with the VSS fault... I guess this is why Custom Dynamics pointed out that the ballasts should not touch the frame or any metal (they are now located in the console area)... my wires coming from the ballast to the foglights were tie wrapped to the frame but wrapped in wire loom... and still it caused electrical noise... we then experimented by pulling the wires away from the frame, start the bike, and turn the foglights on/off, and the bike kept on running as normal.... we then took the wire from one of the foglights and pressed it on the frame, and pressed the foglight switch on/off, and the bike turned off with the VSS fault... even with the addition of a ground wire from the coil to the frame... so tomorrow I will install an anodized/heat resistant wire loom over the current wire loom and make sure it does not touch any metal and just have it suspended under the covers... I hope this does the trick... :pray:

thanks
Dennis
 
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