Sirs, First of all, as a new guy here in the forum, I have to say that the place is great! There are really valuable pieces of information available here, as I've found out so far. :biglaugh: I've got -85 Max type 1FK full power model. There are 46000 miles on the clock. The set-up is as follows: stock engine, t-boost, needles shimmed with 2 washers each, crimp soldering done, new fuel filter, new 18 Ah battery, new spark plugs, regulator/rectifier recently renewed with -96 on type and then double D clutch. Will be soon receiving parts for solid engine mounts and furbur fix. Well, let's get into the business. The other day I was cruising in the city. Already some 20 km done and the weather was perfect. I had maybe 4th gear on and some 2...3 krpm on the clock when it happened. The bike started to make awful noise and engine died down shortly after. Noticed that the tach stopped working also. I was pretty sure that one or two cylinders fouled a plug, because the tach gets it's signal from one of the front cylinders in this model - and the signal obviously ended. There were also some reasons to expect that because that time the v-boost was all the time open and the low end mixture set up richer. I used pretty much low end with big gears in the city, as with this set-up the torque is tremendous and the engine just goes with any gear, any rpm and any throttle position. Now, I managed to get about 1 km forward couple of times and every time it happened again. Then it stopped completely. I got a lift from a friend to home to get some tools and spare plugs. Checked the spark from plug - and the result was normal! (There was about 1 hour break and the engine was cooled down.) It started and run normally again, when heading back home. However after about 5 km it did it again. Then, after cooling down it would start but once the temp gauge came close to mid part of the range, the problem occurred again. First I thought it would have been the carb problem (see "shooting the shotgun" at http://vmax.lvlhead.com/tips/shotgun.htm) and cleaned all the carbs according to the procedure. No difference. :bang head: Next I suspected the possibly too rich mixture combined with open v-boost. I restored the original setting and even tried with different spark plugs. No difference. Had to believe it to be electrical... Then I measured all ignition (HT) coils, both primary side and secondary side. Everything according to specs. Proceeded into measuring the resistances from the connector of the ignition pick-up coils. The resistance was ok between the black wire and all the others one by one - except the grey, which did not show any continuity. I checked the wiring between the coils (in this model there are two of them - 1 for cylinders 1 and 3 with orange and white-red wires, and the other for cylinders 2 and 4 with grey and white-green wires) and it looked suspicious. So I cut off the bad part of the wiring and made new with soldering the joints. Now the resistances were according to the specs. Then put it back again and started great - until getting warm! Same problem - and the resistance between black and grey was infinite. When the bike cooled down, the resistance became again normal. :bang head: Once more the same procedure - and this time I changed both grey and white-green wires from as close to the pick-up coil as possible all the way to the connector. Again ok. Started fine, but after getting warm the problem exist. And - guess what? - no resistance anymore between black and grey... until the bike cools down. Then it's again back inside the specs. So I guess there is no other choice than to renew the coils set (new one costs 375 eur). By the way, Mark Milne pointed out a thing that is very important to recognize when messing with these coils: The common wire from the pick-up coils IS black and NOT orange, as the Haynes manual and Yamaha manuals say. :clapping: In order to avoid that cost is still I'm thinking whether would be possible to open and fix the coil itself from inside... Does anyone have experience of this?:ummm: