Ms. MaryK: great point..!!! LOL!!!
Mr. thesurgeonistherobot: If in emergency I'll find immediately and automatically the IGNITION switch, which shuts ALL down. So the kill switch shuts the engine down, but what about all the electrical that is still HOT and "could" spark a fire?
OK, I JUST remembered WHY the kill switch was introduced! It was back in the old times where throttle cables with carburetors got hung and stayed wide open!!! Yes, people got killed because of that. THAT was the one and ONLY reason why there was an "EMERGENCY ENGINE SHUT OFF SWITCH" (kill switch) right there on the right besides the throttle grip. And yes, this is why also the lights MUST stay on, if that happens during night time, doing this with the ignition switch you would not see anything any longer. But that switch was never intended to shut an engine down under normal operating conditions!
If for any reason I could not reach the ignition switch after an accident, then believe me, I do know where the kill switch is! And it is basically for ANY motorcycle and scooter at the same place... So I honestly I am a firm believer to use the ignition switch ONLY, under normal conditions. The kill switch ONLY for engine run-away situations. And BTW: many times after a severe accident the engine is NOT running any longer, but all the electricals are still on (!), and the gasoline is leaking slowly from the tank, or carburetor, or cut gas line... I hope you have now the vision of flames with the typical following Hollywood explosion [dramatisized, just kidding, but fire can be reality...]. And that's why I know how to find my IGNITION SWITCH as quickly as I can... been there, done that...