New day, new issues
Went to the garage today and tried to start the scooter. The phone charging icon comes on the screen. I push the starter switch, the relay clicks, but nothing happens. The starter motor is silent. I checked the battery, it is in tip-top shape (no wonder, installed a brand new one a few weeks ago). All the control lights come up, when I turn on the ignition, but nothing happens.
- The kill switch is off (tried swithing on and off a few times)
- The lcd panel is blind, only the control lights operate (why the phone icon is on, I have no idea)
- When I switch on and off the lights (ignition on), the speedo and rpm comes on and off, but still nothing.
- Changed all the fuses, still nothing
If the starter motor died, the lcd display would still operate, so I have no idea what the hell has gone wrong this time.
I'm starting to regret buying this bike.
You definitely have a short circuit somewhere, and if that is the case, it might be the cause of your issues with achieving high revs too, even though CDI is operating properly, it might not at high revs.
(btw. I do not think that this sentence makes sense - "if the starter motor died, the LCD display would still operate").
My P250S shows some signs of bad wiring too. From day one, after rain or washing, the oil pressure LED slightly flickers, obviously, the insulation around sensor is not exactly perfect. I was driving it from the shop to my home on day one and noticed that.
Furthermore, during winter, for the first minute after starting, engine overheat LED will be on and then it will turn off. Furthermore, when I push "passing" light (long beam) and if the gasoline gauge is below 1/3, the "reserve" gasoline LED will go on.
Unfortunately, I cannot stress enough after reading everything on this forum that Kymcos seem to be generally of sh**ty quality.
If I were you, I would first tear apart all tupperware, from front to rear (it takes maybe an hour the first time).
Then I would push the ignition key to on and move by hand one by one cable/harness until I identify where is the short circuit.
This is one of those things that are hard to troubleshoot, take a lot of time and nerves, but costs nothing to fix.
Good luck.