Help thread: CVT gets hot and smells after hill climb
I have been reading about CVT gets hot and smells after hill climb and I am not sure which step should come first in a real workshop diagnosis. I am collecting practical advice from people who actually test things, not just repeat what they saw in a two-minute video.

Discussion
5 repliesFor CVT gets hot and smells after hill climb, I would write down the current condition first. Model, year, mileage, recent work, and exact symptom will save ten posts of guessing.
Also check whether anything was changed recently. The last hands near the bike are often the first suspect, even when those hands are our own. That is how I would approach CVT gets hot and smells after hill climb before spending money.
For CVT gets hot and smells after hill climb, is there a measurement that proves the part is bad, or is it mostly elimination?
Thomas Spagnoli: workshop approach for CVT gets hot and smells after hill climb
With CVT gets hot and smells after hill climb, the useful question is not 'what part is famous for this?' but 'which system stopped doing its job, and under what condition?'
The mistake I see most often with CVT gets hot and smells after hill climb is jumping to the part that sounds most famous. A good mechanic proves the system first: supply, command, output and mechanical condition.
If you are new to this, join the free Motorcycle Mechanics Course on the platform. I made it to explain the workshop logic behind cases like CVT gets hot and smells after hill climb, not just to list random parts.
Bring one result at a time and the forum can narrow it down properly. That is how a thread becomes a real workshop note.
Small update from my side: I found one suspect connector and I am cleaning it before touching anything more expensive. I will post the exact result, even if the answer ends up being embarrassingly simple.