Help thread: Suzuki DL650 V-Strom spark plug wet and fuel smell after failed starts
I am opening this because the search results for Suzuki DL650 V-Strom spark plug wet and fuel smell after failed starts are a mess: three short answers, two miracle products, and one guy saying 'just sell it'. 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 Suzuki DL650 V-Strom spark plug wet and fuel smell after failed starts, I would write down the current condition first. Model, year, mileage, recent work, and exact symptom will save ten posts of guessing.
If you can, post a photo of the part, connector, plug color, or dash message. A decent photo can save half a page of wrong assumptions. That is how I would approach Suzuki DL650 V-Strom spark plug wet and fuel smell after failed starts before spending money.
Thomas Spagnoli: workshop approach for Suzuki DL650 V-Strom spark plug wet and fuel smell after failed starts
For Suzuki DL650 V-Strom spark plug wet and fuel smell after failed starts, I would slow the job down for ten minutes and make the evidence visible. Guessing feels fast, but it usually makes the repair longer.
Keep the original setup in mind. Many faults appear after a small change, and the change is often more useful than the symptom.
The free Motorcycle Mechanics Course on this site goes through this exact thinking: electrical checks, fuel checks, mechanical baseline, diagnostic flow and safe habits. It will help you approach Suzuki DL650 V-Strom spark plug wet and fuel smell after failed starts with less guessing.
Post the machine model, year, mileage and one clear symptom, and I would choose the next test from there.
Does Suzuki DL650 V-Strom spark plug wet and fuel smell after failed starts usually point to one system, or can it be caused by something completely upstream?
Thanks everyone. I wrote the checks down and I will come back with results, not just vibes and panic. At least now I know what I am trying to prove before spending money.