After a ride my bike smells like rotten eggs or people say smells like sulfered. What can cause that exhaust to smell like that. One weekend I was riding in the rain and the next morning started the bike and see that water was leaking a hole on the bottom of the exhaust. Could that cause for the smell of rotten eggs. Let me know and advises thanks.
Nothing is wrong with your bike. A quick check of google found me this :
The rotten egg smell means that the catalytic converter is working properly.
"It's (the smell) hydrogen sulfide or H2S. It does not exist in the fuel or oil, which is why you can't smell it at the gas station. It does, however, come from the gasoline. Almost all gasoline contains organic sulfur compounds with sulfur levels ranging from 30 to 100 parts per million, approximately.
"As the fuel burns, the organic sulfur compounds break down into simpler compounds. If the engine is running lean (more air than is needed to burn the fuel), the sulfur is likely to be SO2, or sulfur dioxide. The catalytic converter can change this into SO3 (sulfur trioxide), which then reacts with the catalyst to form sulfates on the catalyst. Over several minutes there is a build up of sulfates. If the engine suddenly starts to run rich (not enough air to burn all the fuel), such as when you stop at a red light, climb a steep hill, or brake hard to slow down, the chemistry changes. Now the sulfates are unstable and they react to form hydrogen sulfide, which is expelled from the exhaust pipe all at once. The high concentration is the reason for the bad smell! This effect is a common problem with new vehicles because the catalyst is working at a very high efficiency. However, as the catalyst gets older, the activity drops. Fortunately for us, one of the first reactions to be affected is the formation of hydrogen sulfide. So as the catalyst gets older, the smell will go away. It should also be noted that many catalysts never smell bad. One reason might be because the vehicle doesn't run lean for much of the time, or perhaps the catalyst has an extra component that reduces the production of hydrogen sulfide.
"Next time Eggbert and Shelley stop behind a vehicle that smells bad, they can be grateful that it's at least not contributing much to atmospheric pollution."
Thanks to this month's Whizard, Dr. Gordon Bartley, a senior research scientist in the Emissions Research Department of the Automotive Products and Emissions Research Division. Bartley specializes in the development, aging, and evaluation of vehicle emission catalysts.

You might try a different brand of fuel or octane as some of the articles I read while googling spoke about that...
Tell me 1) how many miles on the bike 2) Do you run the engine at high RPM low load or Low RPM high load 3) Lots of short trips and shut offs start ups?
My self personally I've smelt the cats during warm-up in the driveway but thats to be expected. I guess I've always known what they smell like so never gave it a second thought. If you continue to smell exhaust sulfur even after everything heats up you might have a tune up issue...plugs or injectors or something out of wack...but more than likely everything is normal.
As for water coming out your exhaust...thats normal too. I think if I remember correctly there is a drain hole in the bottom of the muffler. Water is a normal by-product of combustion and until the bike's exhuast warms up to a temp high enough the water comes out as a liquid, through the drain hole or just plain out the tail pipe. Once the system heats up the water is still coming out just in its less understood and sometimes mysterious form...Vapor
