Skorpions have two fans, but the the Baggi only one if I am not mistaken.
I see the culprit side stand switch was found; I was about to mention this one. It is a continual source of trouble with other big singles as well, in particular the Yamaha SRX.
Like "Sililetric" (don't you guys have names?) did, bridging that switch is an immediate cure to suddenly dying as long as the fuses don't blow. The neutral switch cannot cause any problems by itself.
Skorpions and I imagine the Baggi don't have any diodes in the harness, unlike the Yamaha SZR. Diodes don't click, they don't make any sound at all unless they fizz out. MZs have a simple relais switch to manage the sidestand/neutral nonsense. Bridging the side stand switch puts it effectively out of service, i.e. in continuous on. I have never run into this relais causing problems by itself, but you can remove it entirely, connecting the basic
+12v main it switches and doing away with sidestand/neutral safety nonsense.
The fans are connected directly to the battery + as is the starter solenoid. Everything else goes across the 20 Amp main fuse, the 15Amp fuse is for the lighting.
Obviously, if the main fuse is blowing, there is a short circuit somewhere.
Then, the handlebar switches of the Skorpion (and Baggi?) have a tendency to short circuit against the bar. Wrapping the bar under the switch with tape is a good idea.
Chances are a sort is in the harness itself in that part between frame and headlight, the part that continually get bent back and forth. Skorpion Tours have this problem rather more often between frame and headlight. Sports don't, cause the harness doesn't get flexed. I certianly did with my Tour and eventually made an entirely new and much simpler harness using the
SilentHektik electronic fuse box. Can't recommend this thing highly enuf. Sorry his page is only in German. The box has 3 8 Amp "fuses", the blinker relais and and additional relais that can be used for what ever you want except the starter. I use it for +12 to the CDI and coil. You can also have the box without the additional relais for less money. The ignition key of the new harness turns the entire box on and off, that's all. Since the kill switch switches a relais in the box (minus to ground = only a single wire to the front for that), plus to the CDI and coil are direct. In the end, you harness will have +12v to the ignition key and back to box; 2x +12v from fuse to light switch, horn, starterbutton and brake light switch and from that back to tail light/stop light and starter relais; Blinker relais to blinker switch and two back for right and left rear; kill switch.
that's
2x 2.5mm2 ( doesn't need to be that big) red lines for ignition key,
2 x 1mm2 +12v fused
1x 1mm2 to blinker switch
4x 0,75mm2 brake, tail and both rear blinkers
starter button
killswitch
neutral switch.
That is all of 12 wires in that harness that traverses the frame.
All the front lighting etc stuff can actually remain more or less as it is and is not part of the harness to start with.
The 5 wires from the generator/pickup should go directly to the rectifier and CDI. All 5 are alternating current; the 3 white ones to the rectifier, the other two connections of the rectifier are + and - (marked on the part itself) and can and should go directly to the battery. The two from the pickup (+ & -) should go directly to the CDI.
When I decided to make the harness, I put the CDI on the right side of the seat frame and the rectifier on the left, reversing the original order. I never could understand why they are as they are, making the harness unnecessarily long and complicated. Putting the rectifier on the left, you can take the connections from the engine directly to the rectifier itself without touching the harness at all. Putting the CDI on the right puts it close to the coil for both the +12v to the coil (directly from the CDI and from there to the coil) and coil - from the CDI to the coil -.
When you look at the connectors of the CDI, the pins are:
[ 0, pickup -, pickup + ] [ +12v, 0 ]
[ 0, 0 or tach, -12v ] [ -12v, coil -]
The blue labered boxes do not have the destinct tach output, the orange labered box used in the last Skorpions and in the SZR does. Those tachs will not work from the coil -. Most aftermarket tachs like the Scitsu take their signal directly from the coil -.
You can see that none of this has to be in the harness; -12v is bridged and should come directly from the battery or a dedicated -12v connector. Since the base plate of the
SH-Box must be grounded, I use this. I take +12v from the SH-Box relais, but it can also be connected to one of the "fuses."
Plus to the fan(s) and thermo switches should go directly from the battery thru an inline fuse holder, this can be wrapped in the harness up to the steering head - or done separately.
When you do "blow an fuse," you simply turn off the iginition, wait 10 sec to reset and turn it back on.
Since the SH-Box itself is turned on and off, taking the key out effectively turns EVERYTHING off except the fan(s).
I put the ignition key switch on the right side of the seat frame (like lots of older bikes and Harleys, too) next to the battery, so there is no unswitched + at all in what is now left of the harness.
I habitually use the same
light switch unit as on the SZR so I do not have any problems there.
whatever, there are lots of potentially bad places in the original harness. The components are not usually at fault - except for the side stand switch.