Periodically the cruse/spot switch on my 2007 flhtcuse2 simply goes dead. this always starts and stops when the main ignition switch is turned on and off. I cant seam to find any correlation to heat, cold, rain, or any common factor. when it occurs the indicator lights in the switch, the cruse and the spots are all dead. when it comes back they all work perfectly. I have never been able to get it to happen and stay happening and get the bike to my dealer and when I have had it out and can get to a dealer I have always been on the road , no one stocks the switch and they don't want to dig into it and have me down without parts. My conversations with Harley factory people simply refer me back to my dealer who continues to say with out it in failure mode they don't have a clue what to do. Has anyone else encountered this type of issue and if so what was your outcome? any help would be appreciated.
I always love that excuse. I guess you shouldn't expect your cardiologist to do any testing because you aren't in cardiac arrest
at the moment, but be sure to come back if your heart quits working.
Since the switch is fairly pricey (71765-07, $115), and dealerships won't let you return electrical parts, you probably don't want to just buy a new one and hope it works. I think if I were you I'd do as Pete mentioned, remove the fairing cap and check the connections for the switch. It kind of sounds like an intermittent connection from your description, as opposed to a complete failure of the switch. If you're not the mechanical/electrical type, find a qualified mechanic (not the moron at that dealership who fed you that BS) to do it for you. If it turns out to be a simple electrical connection problem, then you can decide if you want to enlighten the "professional" technician at your dealership or just let him continue to be lazy and ignorant.
Let me make a guess here. You wouldn't happen to have the ESP would you? I've found that warranty or ESP customers are much more likely to get that BS response than folks who come in expecting to pay the bill themselves. It's funny how some places are more than happy to take a customer's money to swap out parts until they accidently fix the problem, but they won't even attempt to diagnose an intermittent problem if it's covered by warranty or ESP because they know the manufacturer or ESP company won't pay them for a treasure hunt sort of repair attempt.
Jerry