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76 ltd wiring harness replacement
- JimatMilkyWay
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I'm not gonna flame you I thought it was pretty good.
Thanks pumps
That makes me feel better already.
All you guys out there, who actually make a living doing electrical stuff on bikes or other, please don't be bashful. Put in your 2c worth.
I was not too embarrassed to put my post out there, even though it was wordy by necessity. I am just into helping those who are totally inexperienced or maybe a little intimidated at using a meter to trouble shoot their scoot.
The stuff I have addressed thus far ain't all that complex, but if you, or you or you have a simpler approach, then let's hear it .
I will also stoop to scoot advise by asking the more knowledgeable to hold my hand as well; check out my most recent post in the carb section.
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- brawnyrebel
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- loudhvx
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I always think of a coil as a current-storage device. It doesn't store it for very long, but you cannot stop the current instantly. The coil forces the current to keep flowing, so in a way, it stores current (even though it's really storing a current-induced B field).
1981 KZ550 D1 gpz.
Kz550 valve train warning.
Other links.
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- floridamba
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First, I would make darn sure it is charging. Start the bike and put a DC voltmeter across the terminals. It should go to 14.7 or at least 13.7 when you rev it up. If you don't get this, then the problem is in the rectifier or regulator. Both are easy to test.
If you are charging, then I would shut the bike off and take out all the fuses. I don't know how many you have, but lets say 3 or so. Take them all out and see if it is discharging the batter. This will help us decide if it's a failed component on a fused circuit, or if it's a short somewhere else.
Put the fuses back one at a time and test to see which circuit is drawing the current. Troubleshoot it from there. Disconnect everything on that circuit and then work backwards as you reconnect them.
Keep notes, no short cuts, you can solve the problem. A DC amp meter would be great but is not necessary.
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- JimatMilkyWay
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ThanksWell since you axed the question I will be pacific when I answer. I used to do this sort of work for Suzuki and also anything Japanese.
First, I would make darn sure it is charging....
I sort of neglected to mention the rather high probability that the battery is not being discharged when switch is off, but instead, when it is on.
When all the lights, ignition, electric windows and everything else are on, it will 'kill' the batt in short order, if the charging system is not healthy.
Post edited by: JimatMilkyWay, at: 2007/02/03 22:53
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- JimatMilkyWay
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I think you have a point there. The energy has to go somewhere when the field collapses.Nice write up Jim!
I always think of a coil as a current-storage device....
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- floridamba
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I would try and take all the fuses out of it and see if it still drains the battery. If it does, then it is a light on somewhere or a failed componet like regulator, rectifier, etc.
If not, then put the fuses back in one at a time, waiting a day or two to see which circuit has the draw that is taking the battery down.
It could be a wire rubbing on the frame, or a bad switch or such. I had a pinched wire on my 82 1000 LTD that blew a fuse recently - the PO had routed the harness up from frame to steering head by going alongside the frame. When the steering head was full-lock left it would pinch the harness - boom - blown fuse. I rerouted the harness under the triple tree and in front of the lower triple clamp and all is well.
It's someplace to look.
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- loudhvx
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If pulling the fuses don't stop the drain, then disconnect the reg/rec and see if that stops the drain. Next would be the starter solenoid, I guess.
1981 KZ550 D1 gpz.
Kz550 valve train warning.
Other links.
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- wireman
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- pumps
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Check out our site. kcvjmc.org
1977 Yamaha XS650
2000 Kaw W650
2 KZ440 LTDs , a 79 KZ400H and an 83 Belt Drive
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- floridamba
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The fuses would show what circuit, then we can figure out what devices on the circuit could cause it.
These bikes have a 3-phase alternator with either a permanent magnet rotor or an excited field alternator.
What specific model/year are we talking about here?
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- 900cows
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