Hi with regard to your quote "Then I suspect it is a wire to terminal lug interruption. The connection at the crimp. Yeah! I'm serious! Every one...." honestly i dont know what you mean, could you translate to a basic level, ive never heard of "connection at the crimp" and im not sure what "wire to the terminal lug interruption".
We do obviously have very hot summers and today its 34 and its just the beginning of June. Also i live in a very humid little town in the middle of national park surrounded by large hills so in the winter it can drop to zero (centigrade or even below freezing point).
We also have here what we call in england sleeping policemen or road bumps, some are very extreme and can be a huge impact to the scooter. I do take the at a higher speed than what i do in the car because for the longer ones I can actually use it as sort of ramp and its fun to get some "air". (please dont think I use my scooter as an xgames freestyle bike) the worse however are the smallest road bumps which are an instant hard impact. I also pick up the children from school if only one goes in for that day and thus can park right outside the door and can scoot home without joining the huge queue of parents picking up their children. Im 90kg and the children are around 30/40 kg now that they are young teens, sorry its been 30 years since we switched from imperial "pounds" and now are metric especially as we live in Spain.
Our roads are as smooth as glass i have locked my front wheels many times and so i back brake as much as i can as ive ended up in the barriers and off the road many times as grip is practically non existent. we get so little rain (over 310 days of sunshine) that the roads are completely different to the ones in the United Kingdom.
Due to work commitment Ive not had much time to continue with the resurrection of the kymco however i will dedicate as much time as i can this weekend.
Please please continue with the advice its so appreciated and as this is the only english speaking Kymco forum its become my only source of information. Many thanks to everyone for thier continued support.