TechTMW wrote:Ah, ok. Well, have you just tried moving the stock switch housing from the one side of the bars to the other?
Yes. It is not easier though. 1) My choke cable is integrated with the housing. 2) I do not have anywhere to put it. Ran out of room on the handlebars. 3) Would have had to remove the grip to get the choke handle/collar off.
TechTMW wrote:This way it can be converted back w/ minimum fuss if you ever try to resell. At any rate, even if that's not feasible, you should be able to at least reroute the wiring from where the switch is to where the new switch will be.
"Minimum fuss" was thrown out the window on this project, otherwise it wouldn't have gotten done

I always worried about that when modifying my truck. I have found that it only makes the thinking a little harder and the money spent much more. Then, none of the stuff I ever did to the truck ever went back to stock.
I'm looking at putting this new toggle switch in the blank slot above the starter switch. Then run the wiring from the toggle switch to the wiring harness as it exits the left housing. I thought if I could tap in there I could still activiate the correct wire for the correct blinker:
Things inside the housing is tight there with the bar and all, so still not real sure I can fit it in there with the wire connectors. So, That plan might change a bit.
The original is a "left for left, right for right, and press center to cancel". I was initially thinking taking out the turn signal assembly and putting it in the other housing, but the switch seems to be built into the housing. It has like a little pivoting metal arm that makes contact at either side to another metal contact depending on which way the turn signal arm has pushed it. Now, the press to cancel just centers that pivoting contact arm so that it is not contacting either side.
TechTMW wrote:
Use your multimeter to determine which wire is right, which is left and which is ground. then use your multimeter to check continuity between terminals when the switch is toggled to the left and then toggled to the right, and hook up the wires accordingly. You should only need to use 3 of the terminals on the new switch.
You really don't even have to check which wire controls which blinker really, as long as you get the ground wire correct, you can just rotate the switch 180 degrees if flipping it left makes the right blinker go on, etc.
Ok, I'll only use 3 terminals. Is that 2 powers and a ground? or? Forgive my ignorance.
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