
Installing A Power Commander
#1
Posted 07 March 2009 - 06:10 pm
The instructions provide a picture showing a four pin connector which it says to disconnect. This appears to be in a bundle of four connectors located under the fuel tank. The problem is that the connectors fitted to the power commander do not fit the four pin connector that appears to be indicated on the instructions.
There is a four pin and a three pin together a little further towards the front of the bike. The connectors fitted to the power commander do fit these.
Has anyone fitted a power commander to their 900, had a similar issue and can you explain what you did?
Many thanks
#2
Posted 07 March 2009 - 10:58 pm
The instructions provide a picture showing a four pin connector which it says to disconnect. This appears to be in a bundle of four connectors located under the fuel tank. The problem is that the connectors fitted to the power commander do not fit the four pin connector that appears to be indicated on the instructions.
There is a four pin and a three pin together a little further towards the front of the bike. The connectors fitted to the power commander do fit these.
Has anyone fitted a power commander to their 900, had a similar issue and can you explain what you did?
Many thanks
It all fits ok, but not in the fashion shown in the fitting manual.
I discovered soon if enough that something didn't add up the way I expected according to the manual. Figured it out on my 2006 model after some fiddling with wires and connectors and I took a few shoots that might be helpful...


Good luck!

MRA modded PUIG screen, air-box mod., Laser Duo-Tech cans, Powercommander, Symtec Motorcycle Grip Heater, Stebel Magnum (black), Centech AP-1 Auxiliary Fuse Panel, Hawkeoiler...

#3
Posted 08 March 2009 - 11:36 am
#4
Posted 08 March 2009 - 01:53 pm
On the principle that you can never have enough useful instruction check out the pic below, which I used when I recently did mine. As AJ says the Dynojet instructions are misleading so use these instead and it'll be fine.

Good luck.

Edited by poldark, 08 March 2009 - 01:55 pm.

#5
Posted 08 March 2009 - 08:00 pm

Good luck.


MRA modded PUIG screen, air-box mod., Laser Duo-Tech cans, Powercommander, Symtec Motorcycle Grip Heater, Stebel Magnum (black), Centech AP-1 Auxiliary Fuse Panel, Hawkeoiler...

#6
Posted 08 March 2009 - 08:43 pm
#7
Posted 08 March 2009 - 11:15 pm
You're welcome

MRA modded PUIG screen, air-box mod., Laser Duo-Tech cans, Powercommander, Symtec Motorcycle Grip Heater, Stebel Magnum (black), Centech AP-1 Auxiliary Fuse Panel, Hawkeoiler...

#8
Posted 09 March 2009 - 10:16 am


#9
Posted 09 March 2009 - 10:57 am


Sorry but your dealer is a bit of a plonker.

I'm no great expert but Power Commanders are a bit of electrical wizzardry that interfaces with the bikes FI system to allow a finer tuning than the standard "one size fits all" set-up that the bike manufacturer has built.
Often used by power rangers on sportsbikes who've fitted after-market cans to help set these up and eck out a few bhp more. They're quite an expensive bit of kit (£250) and often need a "custom map" (tuning for your specific bike by an expert - 3/4 hours) at about £150 more, though you can download free maps and people share them around.
For the TDM they should iron out the fuelling glitches that can create uneven power delivery, if you have added a different exhaust also helps get the most out of that too.
But as they effectively ensure the bike is running as good as is possible it would not (IMO) have any negative impact on top speed whatsoever. If you keep an eye on EBay you can pick one up for around £100, well that's what I did anyway.
The bit I'm less sure about is mpg impact, I reckon that as it generates the ideal fueling the consumption should improve (don't know yet on mine), but often people comment it gets worse, I'm pretty sure this is because it's delivered better performance and if you use that then the mpg drops.
Edited by poldark, 09 March 2009 - 11:06 am.

#10
Posted 09 March 2009 - 04:05 pm

I changed the silencers on mine after the CCC cans got damaged (I'll get the photo to ya soon wicky



Edited by dandywarhol, 09 March 2009 - 05:22 pm.
1967 Yamaha TD1C 250, 2014 Kawasaki W800, 2011 Aprilia Tuono 1000 V4, 2020 Yamaha XSR900
"At the cutting edge of technophobia"
#11
Posted 09 March 2009 - 04:19 pm

I changed the silencers on mine after the CCC cans got damaged (I'll get the photo to ya soon wicky



Oh how I wish I could get a custom map for £60, I've called 4 places and they've varied between £150 -£180, that's starting in London (Southern Cross, Kilburn) and then looking further afield Taplow (PDQ), Bexhill (PDM) and Wisbech (X-Bikes).

#12
Posted 09 March 2009 - 07:23 pm
Never heard of a PC reducing top end speed, a friend has fitted several to different bikes. Besides I don't ride around much at 120mph plus and a smooth throttle response would be worth a small sacrifice on top end.
#13
Posted 09 March 2009 - 11:07 pm

1967 Yamaha TD1C 250, 2014 Kawasaki W800, 2011 Aprilia Tuono 1000 V4, 2020 Yamaha XSR900
"At the cutting edge of technophobia"
#14
Posted 16 March 2009 - 12:11 pm

#15
Posted 16 March 2009 - 06:48 pm

Were you having the chip removed?

1967 Yamaha TD1C 250, 2014 Kawasaki W800, 2011 Aprilia Tuono 1000 V4, 2020 Yamaha XSR900
"At the cutting edge of technophobia"
#16
Posted 18 March 2009 - 08:42 am

That's a hell of a gain!
Was that with or without baffles?
v8guy; 2003 TDM900 with added bling: Nitron shock, Racetech fork internals, 17" front wheel, K&N filter, Fuel silencers, PC3, Renthal handle bar, Oxford hot hands, Polisport handguards, Scottoiler (kinda..), Baglux, Givi monorack + pannier rails
My TDM: http://www.gtv8.org/tdm/
Current: 2003 Yamaha TDM900, 2015 BMW R1200RS
Past: Honda CLR125, Honda CB500, Triumph Sprint Sport, Honda VFR750FS, Suzuki DRZ400SM, Triumph Speed Triple 955i, 2015 Honda VFR800X
"Being shot out of a cannon will always be better than being squeezed out of a tube" - HST
#17
Posted 18 March 2009 - 06:25 pm
Was that with or without baffles?
Yep, surprised me too - thats with DB killers in.
X is 5000 rpm, blue is akras with db killers - red is Carbon Can Company race cans. I've lost a couple of max. horse over 20,000 miles, better check the valve clearances (maybe I'd better change my signature


Edited by dandywarhol, 18 March 2009 - 06:26 pm.
1967 Yamaha TD1C 250, 2014 Kawasaki W800, 2011 Aprilia Tuono 1000 V4, 2020 Yamaha XSR900
"At the cutting edge of technophobia"
#18
Posted 18 March 2009 - 10:39 pm
That's astonishing, to be honest. I just dug out my plot... with Fuel cans fitted, baffles in, mine made 60bhp at 5000rpm on the day, peaking at 79 at about 7000rpm.
How much are those Akrapovics...?

v8guy; 2003 TDM900 with added bling: Nitron shock, Racetech fork internals, 17" front wheel, K&N filter, Fuel silencers, PC3, Renthal handle bar, Oxford hot hands, Polisport handguards, Scottoiler (kinda..), Baglux, Givi monorack + pannier rails
My TDM: http://www.gtv8.org/tdm/
Current: 2003 Yamaha TDM900, 2015 BMW R1200RS
Past: Honda CLR125, Honda CB500, Triumph Sprint Sport, Honda VFR750FS, Suzuki DRZ400SM, Triumph Speed Triple 955i, 2015 Honda VFR800X
"Being shot out of a cannon will always be better than being squeezed out of a tube" - HST
#19
Posted 18 March 2009 - 11:03 pm

You'll see on my graph its also giving 30 bhp @2750rpm (35 mph) - just enough to hoik up the front with ease

Edited by dandywarhol, 18 March 2009 - 11:04 pm.
1967 Yamaha TD1C 250, 2014 Kawasaki W800, 2011 Aprilia Tuono 1000 V4, 2020 Yamaha XSR900
"At the cutting edge of technophobia"
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