I think that's his point. The motorcycle doesn't ever see the speedometer speed, so it can't limit the bike using an input from the speedometer. It also doesn't see the gear besides neutral, so it can't limit only in top gear. Therefore, to limit the motorcycle's top speed they limited the engine RPM completely, with no allowances made for a higher RPM in different gears.
I'm not sure if I can explain this situation more clearly than I already have.
I never mentioned the speedometer. I'm familiar with the principle used to speed-restrict the bike: using the gear-position sensor as an input, the rev limit is lowered in 5th and 6th gears to cap the bike's top speed at a theoretical 180 Km/h. The way to get around this is to splice a 1.5 Kiloohm resistor into a particular wire on the CDI unit.
This doesn't explain why, when you ride the bike, the revs abruptly cut off at 10 000. I hear the sound of the VVC system switching in, but in the split second after that. the bike simply refuses to rev any higher.
Just smooth, strong revs up to 10K, then nothing.
1. It FEELS like the VVC system - or some crucial part of it - is malfunctioning.
2. 10 000 RPM in 6th gear on this bike works out to 160 Km/h - so it never even gets a chance to hit the Japanese-legislated top speed cap.
This has nothing to do with the bike's speed restriction. It feels like a VVC fault. So, can anyone help?