If that is happening to your bike and no others or very few others, there's a problem with the flash. They need to do it again. You should not take your bike in for a recall and then end up with a bike that you can't ride the way you ride it. IF reflashing it again does not work, they may have to replace the ECU. That is on them. The recall is not due to something you did, it is due to a failure on their part.RacinRay wrote: ↑Sat Mar 27, 2021 9:23 pmThe person I spoke with at Yamaha Corporate said the issues I described are do to the reflash. He said the reflash is not optional for the dealer/customer.bill lumberg wrote: ↑Sat Mar 27, 2021 11:16 am I’d call Corporate directly. I don’t believe for a moment that there is a special flash for some bikes that limits normal revs. If it were my bike, I’d bet that the dealer was misleading me because they didn’t want to go back into the bike to see what they’d screwed up. Next most likely a that they asked someone at the bozo show in Kennesaw, who made up something on the spot.
Both are plausible, and have happened before. Either way, this is not normal for a reflashed bike post recall, as a number of us can attest. Good luck with your dilemma. I’d be upset too.
You should NOT have to pay someone to flash your ECU after they "fixed" it, in order to fix their fix. Be polite yet firm.