I will have a go at the coil tomorrow, but before I tear the other side apart, if the coil was bad would the engine still start using starter fluid as it will start and run when I spray it in the intake!
Thank you
OK, to recap:
This is a scooter with only 500 miles.....so doubt anything much has cooked from wear.
You are not touching the throttle on any start attempts - correct? (this EFI engine does not like any attempt to help it with throttle!)
Pump, injector, spark plug, starter, coil, relay, starter switch - ALL seemed to be working
because it starts/runs with starter fluid.
(1) Is the starter relay still clicking when you push starter button?
Fuel smell on plug - normal. DO let engine rest for some time between starts - repeated attempts will flood the cylinder with fuel - wetting the plug & making for hard starting on even a healthy engine. Wet plug also points to good fuel flow, or at least some fuel flow.
(2) Remove the spark plug - let all the extra fuel in engine dry out for hours.
Firing with starter fluid spray and seeing a good spark on the spark plug - probably means the coil is OK, too. Don't mess with it. Hearing the starter relay
click when you push start button usually means relay is OK, too
(3) After you dry out the engine - Replace the spark plug and try jump starting using a car. Connect your battery to a good battery
in the car -
DO NOT have the car running! Just connect scooter battery to the car battery.
Try starting for a
few seconds only each time. Let things rest/cool between
a few start attempts.
At this point I don't trust your tired battery - and do not think you've cooked either the starter or its relay - unless you were really hammering them. The car jump win or fail will tell us a lot.
No go?
Then stop.
Report back.
Hang in there!
Stig