Thought I should pass along a hard earned Commando lesson in case there is someone else as stupid and careless as I was. My Commando would not start when I got it out of winter storage this year. I have been busy with other "stuff" and I have a running BSA and Ducati, so I had put off finding my problem until yesterday. I took the Commando off the Battery Tender and began troubleshooting the problem. No spark. Battery good. Voltage at coils. Pulled the points cover (I run a Boyer) and I had power there, but I found a bullet connector on the Boyer stator PC board was improperly crimped (by the factory) and it pulled right off the wire. It's been running that way for many years. I replaced the connector and the Commando fired up second kick. Time for the Happy Dance! I rolled it out of the garage and it was happily idling while I geared up for a ride. It suddenly died and I look over to see smoke and fire pouring out from under the seat. Fortunately I got the fire out before it caused too much damage other than many of the ground wires with the insulation burned off. It was still sparking from the now uninsulated wires but I managed to get the battery disconnected before it caught fire again. I was extremely unhappy and just put it in the garage in disgust. All evening I was thinking what could have caused the fire. This morning at about 6 AM I was laying in bed still thinking about it when the answer came to me. The Battery Tender pigtail and the arcane Brit positive ground system were my undoing. A Battery Tender quick connect pigtail is very handy on bikes that don't get ridden every day or two. I have them on all my bikes, but they were designed for negative ground vehicles. When you pull the Tender from the pigtail it leaves one side of the polarized plug exposed. There is a rubber insulating cover you are supposed to snap on the pigtail but I had neglected to do so. This is not a problem on a negative ground bike as the exposed metal part on the pigtail is connected to the negative side of the battery. BIG problem on a positive ground bike if that exposed metal pin touches the bike frame... like happened to mine while it was sitting there idling. When the pin touched the frame the fuse didn't blow but the huge amperage pulled through the wiring harness caused the insulation on that big bunch of red ground wires going to the battery to melt and catch fire. I am fortunate I was close by the bike, not riding at speed and that the current draw dropped the voltage to the Boyer which killed the engine and got my immediate attention. So ALWAYS cover those Battery Tender pigtails when not in use so you don't have the unpleasant experience of seeing your bike on fire. Hopefully I am looking at just a bit of wiring work to get the Commando back on the road... but it certainly could have been much worse.