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Post by exuptoy on Nov 4, 2018 14:30:59 GMT
Found a post over in the tech section of the FZ10 web forum HERE and decided to make one. So, I ordered the bits from eBay (the only difference in the part numbers of the UK site was the 4 pin Sumitomo plug is called the MT090. The Sumitomo connector is HERE. So the parts duly arrived and it turned out that the OBD2C plug which I purchased had an issue with pin 16 (power) and would not power up my scanner. So, because my scanner was a cheap ass eBay job which cost me around £8 a long time ago, I decided to cut off the original OBD2 plug and just fit my Sumitomo 4 pin MT090 plug direct to my scanner. The only difference then was the colour codes of the wiring inside my scanner plug. In the instructions over on FZ10 forum, it said to fit the following>>>> Pin 14 (brown w/white stripe) > connector slot A which is now Blue Pin 6 (green) > connector slot B which is now Purple Pin 16 (green w/white stripe) > connector slot C which is now Yellow Pin 4 (orange) > connector slot D which is now Green Here's the completed pics. The first of which is borrowed from there FZ site.
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Post by Deleted on Nov 4, 2018 15:12:06 GMT
I bought a cheap Bluetooth obd and the Yamaha cable, much simpler, use my phone to read, clear any codes and you can leave the Bluetooth dongle connected and get live info anytime.
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Post by exuptoy on Nov 4, 2018 15:20:05 GMT
Fair play to you fella. The only reason I wanted this was to clear any DTC codes, so no real reason to leave it connected, for me at least.
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Post by Andrew on Apr 20, 2020 16:58:28 GMT
I bought a cheap Bluetooth obd and the Yamaha cable, much simpler, use my phone to read, clear any codes and you can leave the Bluetooth dongle connected and get live info anytime. Can you provide details? What info can/do you see while riding, vs stationary? Thanks.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 21, 2020 12:51:04 GMT
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Post by charwood23 on Apr 22, 2020 9:04:00 GMT
I make these for £12 posted to the UK. The advantage being that you can use generic ODB2 readers across all your vehicles. The advantage of a Bluetooth reader is with an adapter such as mine you can keep it connected under the seat. A traditional reader/scanner is too bulky to do this. For Android users you can then download the excellent Torque Pro app which makes your phone and diagnostic tool. It's fully customisable too. With your phone fixed to your bars etc. you can continue to log and view data live time which may be useful.
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