Hey guys, the brick (1986 K75C) stopped working. I think it may be the fuel pump. I'd been having trouble with her running; she totally died on me three times on the interstate but fired right up when I hit the start button so I was able to ride home. A few days later after doing some research I tried to start her with no luck. Couple more days later, she finally fired up and I let her idle for about 2 minutes when she just died. Now it doesn't sound like she's even trying to fire. I do have very solid crank. I tested the battery at 12V but I wanted make sure it was strong even when starting, so to eliminate the battery being the problem, I hooked up the car charger and charged at 2 amp over night then set it to 10 amp trying to start.
I don't think I hear the fuel pump run when I turn it on or when I try to start. I hear some humming when I try to start but I think that's the starter. I do hear a relay click off a few seconds after letting off the start button. I tried a jumper wire from the battery + to fuse #6 as detailed in this thread:
http://www.k100-forum.com/t1686-fuel-pump-not-powering-up. Still didn't hear the fuel pump though? I unplugged and tested the left 4-pin under-tank connector (which I cleaned a few months back with contact cleaner and a brass brush) at the green and white wire and had a solid 12V. I also plugged it back in and backprobed the green/white wire, getting 12V.
I should mention that I've stripped her down and traded the instrument cluster for a more simple speedo with RBM's help and his control board. Also, the previous owner removed the ignition key and installed a toggle switch. I haven't had any electrical problems other than the 4-pin fuel connector I cleaned a few months ago, which immediately worked perfectly after cleaning. I put about 1500 miles since I got her from the previous owner and she's been running really nicely.
Can I be pretty certain it's the fuel pump at this point? I read some things about the fuel sender unit but not sure. If anyone can help me figure out what to do next, I'd appreciate it.