Was following the 4v TPS adjustment found here, posted by Frankenduck I believe. Wasn't getting the 12v LED or the cluster temp light to come on at idle without pressing down on the throttle linkage. Just a little bit of finger pressure gave desired results. Decided I would adjust the TPS just a bit to bring the light(s) on at idle, and off just at opening throttle.
I loosened the two bolts, and was never able to get the light(s) to come on at any position... Completely removed TPS, cleaned the connectors, cleaned the plug (not that there was anything in there to begin with). Pins are in good shape, plug-side is tight, should be making good contact.
Tried seeing if there was a difference in running without the TPS plugged in (might be getting confused with the switch type / 2v TPS). Without, it wouldn't run except for idle (although didn't try WOT) so running without isn't an option (again, probably just a 2v thing)
In the end, I put it back together near where it was prior. Then let the bike warm up and basically rough tune it back to idle correctly, and not spit and sputter with revs, and return to idle reliably.
I did find another thread talking about the resistances between certain pins at certain throttle rotation. But this was more so just guess work by feel, going by 1/4 throttle, 1/2 throttle, etc. without setting up a stationary piece of paper on the bars with marks for the amount of throttle, and an indicator on the throttle itself. I was getting similar results to these / his numbers if it means anything.
So, now I'm wondering if the TPS is *just bad enough* to not give me the light test results (since it still runs better with the TPS installed) or if I need to chase something else? The diagnostic plug and/or wiring?
EDIT
Frankenducks post covers the voltage readout procedure, not the LED/temp light procedure. I did not try the voltage method. I'll need the wife's extra hands during the kids naptime, or go get some more / better leads for the meter, and put a gator clip on the wire I'm using to ground the diagnostic plug.