I'm glad this worked out the way it did but I'm not sure I understand it.
In March I rebuilt the front and rear calipers on my 95 K75 zombie and replaced the lines with Spieglers. That entailed also taking off the ABS sensors. When I got everything back together and rode, the ABS light flashed until I hit 72mph then went out. Not good for in-town riding where the speed limit is 25 if you have to get it up to 72mph to activate your ABS.
A couple weeks ago I got the tranny and rear end back on and rode -- again, light went out at 72mph. I hadn't touched the calipers or drained the rear brake lines for the rear end work, just bungeed everything
up and out of the way.
A buddy of mine suggested that when I rebuilt the calipers I might have misinstalled the shims under the ABS sensor which was giving faulty readings below a certain RPM and that I'd have to remove the sensor and make sure the gap was within tolerance. Getting that sensor back on is a PITA so I decided I'd do that later when the bike was back on the road so I could read out the fault codes.
I proceeded then to pull off the front wheel to paint the fork sliders. When I got it all back together yesterday and rode, lo and behold, the ABS light turned off immediately as soon as bike started moving as it is supposed to. So -- all fixed and I didn't have to fix it! A miracle.
But not being one to believe in miracles on the K-bike level, I am curious as to what happened. Prior to this, the front calipers were installed properly with the mounting bolts torqued to spec. All I did was remove calipers from the wheel and put them back on. I also washed the wheel but didn't scrub down the ABS disk. Anyway, I thought this would be worth sharing and maybe someone has an explanation that might help someone else out later on down the road.
Van