No Electric Power

  • rnuse
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01 Jul 2010 16:07 #379504 by rnuse
No Electric Power was created by rnuse
Riding home from work it dies. So I grab the clutch and all electric dies, I then let go of the clutch to roll the motor again and it sputters when I give it gas but barely. The fuel light was on at that point for some reason(but plenty of fuel.

I push it off the road and check fuse's. All are good. 3 in the fuse box and one coming off the battery.Right?

So I assume the relay went bad in the rig to my coils. I connected the 12v to the coils and to the kill switch wire in the coil mod. Which looking back I realize I was powering my bike through the kill switch. But I made it home.

Got a new relay hooked up and still nothing.

Anyone? Thanks in advanced.

It's beautiful in Cincinnati tonight and I'd love to ride it. And more importantly this weekend!

1982 kz750 ltd
Drag bars, 4into1 V&H with no baffle.

1991 zephyr 550
about to give up on her.
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01 Jul 2010 16:08 #379505 by rnuse
Replied by rnuse on topic No Electric Power
By the way. This is at the top of the Smokey Mountains from early spring. Great ride!

1982 kz750 ltd
Drag bars, 4into1 V&H with no baffle.

1991 zephyr 550
about to give up on her.

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01 Jul 2010 19:10 #379555 by MFolks
Replied by MFolks on topic No Electric Power
Get a multimeter and start checking where power is and isn't.Could be a broken wire(s) and/or ignition switch.

The Dreaded Shorting/Intermittent Electrical Problem!


Here is the most basic method I know(Taken from www.kzrider.com by member Patton)

1. Charge your battery and have it load tested if you can. The floating ball hydrometer can be used to check the specific gravity of the charged cells in the battery.

2. Disconnect the Black lead from the (-) Battery terminal... or Red from the (+) Battery terminal, it does not matter which one.

3. Connect one of the following test setups in series with the Battery terminal and lead:
3.1 A 12 V light bulb,
3.2 A 12 V test light,
3.3 A 12 V test buzzer or,
3.4 A 12 V horn... you get the idea.

4. With the Ignition Switch OFF, go through your harness and wiggle the wires while looking/listening for the test setup to go on/start buzzing.

5.With the Ignition Switch ON, repeat the test except this time the looking/listening for the test setup to go off/stop buzzing.

6. Be prepared to open the Ignition switch and check/test for solder joint failure and or circuit board micro breaks (don't ask how I know this ).

7. Be prepared to pull the wires out of the Head Light to test for failures at or near the grommet.

8. Be prepared to open the harness at or near the Steering Neck for failures. This is where wires tend to exhibit fatigue due to repetitive movement.

9. Be prepared to open the left and right switch gear to search for rust and or broken parts. CAUTION: watch out for flying springs, ball bearings and stuff. Do indoors on White sheet (again don't ask ).

10. Be prepared to follow the heavy gauge wire from the Starter Solenoid (Relay) to the starter for bare wire exposure. Especially near bends and grommets.

11. If you can reproduce the fault symptom your are pretty much home free. Be prepare to find and repair/replace any internal wire breaks, insulation break downs, exposed wires, rubber grommet failures, etc. Often, shrink tubing will solve the problem temporarily until something better can be done.

12. I use a very good electrical contact cleaner/preservative called De-oxit made by Caig Labs in San Diego Ca. Their website is www.deoxit.com It can be purchased at Radio Shack and any other electronic supply store. I use it on all of my motorcycle’s electrical connectors , in my home entertainment center’s stereo patch cords and cordless phones charging cradles.

1982 GPZ1100 B2
General Dynamics/Convair 1983-1993
GLCM BGM-109 Tomahawk, AGM-129A Advanced Cruise Missile (ACM)

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