0
So I had a strange conversation with my roommate.
A couple weeks ago I took his Triumph for a spin. I pulled into into the garage and he saw me flip the kill switch to turn it off, standard procedure, kill switch off, ignition switch off.
He goes off on a rant about not using the kill switch and how it damages the computers in Triumphs. I said it sounded ridiculous and noted that people who don't use the kill switch on a regular basis aren't going to be quick enough to use it in an emergency. (Per MSF and just about everyone else)
So he proceeds to show me the manual for his Speed Triple where it actually says not to use the kill switch. It looks like a documentation error. But there is still something going on. Basically it sounds like what they mean is don't use the kill switch to turn the bike off and then walk away leaving the ignition on, killing the battery and in the process perhaps messing some stuff up.
However, and this is even more weird, is the Triumph kill switch appears different then every other bike I've ever ridden (Honda, Suzuki, Yamaha, Kawasaki, H-D).
On all the other bikes I've ridden the kill switch disables the engine but everything else stays on until you turn the ignition off. If you turn the ignition off with the engine running everything instantly stops. I have (for example) looked at the Honda electrical diagram to confirm this. (And ran into it when wiring up some stuff on my bike)
On his triumph the kill switch instantaneously turns the whole bike off. The ignition however will shut the engine off and then leave the rest of the bike powered up for a brief period before shutting down. (This would kind of support the idea that it's computer needs to shutdown)
Anyone ever look at the electrical diagrams for a triumph (e.x. service manual) or know more about this? It almost sounds like it's more like a doc error that got misread by a bunch of riders and turned into common knowleged. A kill switch which can't be used all the time seems like a bad design.