Well, there are a couple. Most full exhausts or slip-on exhaust systems that eliminate the valve assembly need a way to trick the motor, often times they do this by including a specially designed metal plate that replaces the pulley on the exhaust motor. The purpose of this plate is to restrict the motor movement to simulate the valve and cable assembly. However, this has a couple drawbacks. First, the motor assembly is still in the bike spinning around doing nothing! This is extra weight and space being taken up by a component that isn’t really performing any function other than tricking the computer. We’ve also seen lots of servo motors burn up by poorly designed or installed plates that do not have the stops set correctly resulting in the ECU trying to spin the motor past a hard stop, the motors fail and start making annoying ticking or buzzing sounds. To be fair, a lot of servo motors fail just under normal use as well, but these plates seem to exacerbate the problem.
The other option we’ve seen is even worse, “homemade or DIY” servo eliminators. These are usually sold on eBay or on web forums by people who have no electronics skill or knowledge. You can pick these out pretty easily: they are big, wrapped in electrical tape balls, or sealed in globs of epoxy, etc. The people making and selling these usually don’t have access to the connectors so they come with bare wires you are supposed to solder up to your wiring harness or even worse paperclip into the factory connectors (yes seriously, we’ve seen it!). However, the truly scary thing is the “circuits” they use, usually just a couple of resistors and a capacitor. They feed motor control voltage (+ or – 12 volt) directly into the ECU sense pin (spec’d at 0-5 volt max) with only a current limiting resistor. These often times do not work, but even when “working” could be slowly damaging the engine control unit by repeatedly sending unsafe voltage into the sensitive computer over and over and over again. Unfortunately, once the damage has been done it can often only be fixed by purchasing a new engine control unit which costs a fortune. Please, please, please do not go this route. You are rolling the dice and eventually will be replacing your bike’s electrical system. The good news is newer bikes are combating this by making the servo motor checking algorithms more complex requiring a better design, which fits perfectly into the Servo Buddy’s capabilities and eliminates the market of these hack jobs.
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