The idea of the jumper wire sounds good..where do I put it?
Thanks, Bill
Bill, its been a while and I am at work and cannot check. But, your coils (I think you have a twin coil model) will have a terminal that receives +ve 12 volts via the ignition and kill switch. Identify which wire it is and disconnect it, then make up a lead direct from +ve battery terminal (with an inline 10amp fuze if you desire) and connect it directly to the +ve coil terminal - your coils are now "hot" and if you turn the engine over - it should start. Go for a ride sufficient to cause the sudden failures you have been experiencing - if it doesn't fail you have positively excluded the coils and wiring between coil and points/ breaker. If it does fail, then your problem is confined to the coils and contact breaker - next step would be to make another jumper direct to the breaker and see if you still have sudden stops - if you do, replace the breakers, if it still stops, replace the coils (but I very much doubt it will be the coils of breakers - the reason I propose going the way of jumpering out chunks of the bike's wiring harness is to "move the fault" as my old apprentice master used to say. Once you stop an intermittent fault from happening, you can positively eliminate everything still connected at the time the fault stops manifesting and can then work from a known base.
DON"T FORGET TO DISCONNECT THE JUMPER TO THE COILS or you will have a flat battery, cooked coils, or both
