With the interlocks bypassed, the starter will operate if the transmission is in gear .
You can bypass the starter relay to see if it the problem part, first you need to identify the relay, it should be a relay with a plastic cover and should have a wiring diagram molded in to top of the cover .
You need to remove the positive cable form the battery .
Reason is, there is a red wire going to the connector that the relay mounts into and it's 'hot' all the time, meaning it has power direct from the battery .
After the cable is removed from the connector base, remove the relay, you may need to pry it out with a flat blade screwdriver .
If you don't remove the cable from the battery, you may touch the hot blade of the relay to a ground and get a 'shower of sparks'.
After the relay is removed, reconnect the positive cable to the battery .
Then insert a bare wire between the slots on the connector base that have the red wire and black wire .
When you do this, the starter should operate, so you need the transmission in neutral .
This checks to make sure the starter is not faulty .
You can check the relay while it's out of the bike, you need to get wires on the blades of the relay that correspond to the slots in the base that have wire colors blue with a yellow spiral band and brown with a black spiral band, then connect them to a 12v dc power source .
If the windings are good in the relay, it should click when power is applied and removed .
To check the load contacts of the relay, connect a multimeter to the blades on the relay that would be connected to the red wire and the black wire, when you apply power to activate the relay, the multimeter should read 0, or at best an ohm or two .
I had a relay that would click, but the load contacts stayed 'open', I removed the cover and adjusted the arm that is spring loaded and got the relay to work for a few more years .
These tests need to be done with a known good battery .
Hope I didn't confuse you too much with this !!!!!
