Nope, I was missing something because I assumed ...OK, you had not checked the rear ones so that makes more sense now. I thought that I was missing something.

See post #27 - not electrical at all ...As Larry stated do a voltage drop test . Easiest way to find poor ground or bad, burnt or corroded connections.
Try one of these! They come in “red”!Well, Frost, one of my 97 ABSII ST1100s has decided once again to be ugly.
I've been hunting down a carb issue so I have her in my shop.
I was starting her to test to see if I had the issue resolved.
I got tired and called it quits for the evening.
When I go back out there the next morning, she will not turnover.
All I get when I hit the start button is a 'buzz' and the light bar above the speedo goes dim.
Already tried a known good battery and another known good starter but no joy.
It has already had the 'red wire' bypass done.
Battery terminals looked fine both on the starter end and the battery end.
It's almost as if the engine is locked up.
I am confused as to what could have instantly gone south overnight in a heated garage.
I guess I could pull all the plugs and see if she will turn over.
It seems I never have the 'simple' problems it is usually really weird stuff.
Any ideas?

No thank you - I don't care for B(reak) M(y) W(allet)s in any color!
Is that hose connected (by junctions) to fittings in the base of the carb that are on each 'corner'?I would need a picture of the hose, to match up with my St to verify if it's necessary, Mine doesn't have a Pair system on it, there is a hose connecting all four CV Slides too balance them with same air pressure.
I believe soIs that hose connected (by junctions) to fittings in the base of the carb that are on each 'corner'?
Curious as to where they 'end up' - I've seen some pictures where the ends just 'rest' in a bracket on the front of the carb base.Need to clean my K&N air cleaner will take a picture of it , today.
Ha!!!!!No thank you - I don't care for B(reak) M(y) W(allet)s in any color!![]()
The petcock would not have stopped the bad carbs from flooding the cylinders.
Just curious as to how it could if the other carb floats were functioning properly?Huh? It wouldn’t…? I sure thought a functioning Auto Fuel Valve would in fact keep fuel from overfilling the float bowls, with stuck open floats, and sending fuel to the cylinder’s combustion chambers; assuming a fuel tank level above that of the carbs, AFV removed. Am I wrong….?
John (seriously trying to visualize all this….)
Trust me - It was pretty impressive since it shot out of both back cylinders!Here's my thought: without the vacuum shut-off installed, if there is residual head pressure in the tank along with a slight vaccum from the bowls draining, it could allow fuel to be sucked in. Remember, the fuel cap only prevents air from escaping not from being pulled in as the level drops. And depending on where the crank position is, it woudn't take much fuel to completely fill the cylinder and lock it if it were near TDC.
I personally would have loved to see video of the fuel being shot out of both cylinders like a dragster as it was expelled.