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650 to 750 swap
- zippoman
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- RetroRiceRocketRider
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- ...bring in the machine that goes PING!
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The '77 KZ650 used a YB10L-A2 battery = Capacity (Amp. Hours)11 and a 1.1 amp charging current
The '82 KZ750 used a YB12A-A battery = Capacity (Amp. Hours) 1.2 and a 1.2 charging current.
Along with those minor differences, the positive and negative terminals are on opposite sides also.
The '82 KZ750's also had an IC igniter.
Not that it truely relates to the charging system, but it is an electrical component.
Did you wire that in as well?
It could even be that the 30 year old wiring on your bike simply can't handle the newer charging system, either that or there's possibly a short somewhere.
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- zippoman
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- RetroRiceRocketRider
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One thing I can suggest (unless you've already done so), is to swap over to an AGC or ATO (blade) type fuse box and new wiring to it.
The old style glass tube fuses and crappy fuse boxes on these old KZ's are notorious for literally melting.
Good idea to swap over BEFORE this possible happens to your bike too.
Plus the blade type fuses are more readably available than the glass fuses.
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- loudhvx
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Another possibility is that the connections to the brown wire on the reg/rec are faulty. That would make the regulator stop working... which is not a problem until the engine revs up and there is too much power coming from the alternator.
Another possibility is that the wiring is not correct.
I assume you connected the regulator in where the old rectifier used to be. But you need the brown wire from the old regulator to connect to the new reg/rec (assuming you have a Kawasaki reg/rec). (The old black and green regulator connections will do nothing on a 750-type regulator).
Does your new reg/rec have 5 or 6 wires?
1981 KZ550 D1 gpz.
Kz550 valve train warning.
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- zippoman
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- Mark Wing
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Mark
Jesus loves you Everyone else thinks your an ***
77 KZ650 C1 with ZX7 forks, GPZ mono rear, wider 18 police wheels and Yoshimura motor.
Yorba Linda Cal.
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- loudhvx
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I got the r/r from Jeff @ Z1, its 5 wire to the plug 3 yellow,a brown and a black with a white off the r/r. I have changed my fuses to the blade type and checked all my connections in the harness.
EDIT: It's a 6 wire reg/rec, then.
On the new reg/rec the three yellow wires are the 3-phase ac wires from the alternator and the white and black go to the battery.
The brown wire goes to the brown wire that went to the old regulator.
The green wire that went from the old regulator to the old alternator won't be connected to the 750 motor. The black wire that went to the old regulator is just a ground and you won't need it..
As for the main fuse blowing; main fuses can blow from over-current, or can melt from excess heat due to a bad connection. Follow the advice of replacing the fuse block if the wires look melted or burned around the fuse holders.
The Dyna S uses about twice the power of the original igntion, so it may be using an extra 3 amps. If you are running 3-ohm coils, that's an extra 2.5 amps. This extra current shouldn't be enough to blow a solid 20-amp fuse, but could exacerbate an existing bad connection at the fuse, causing it to melt.
Post edited by: loudhvx, at: 2007/04/14 13:21
1981 KZ550 D1 gpz.
Kz550 valve train warning.
Other links.
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- zippoman
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- loudhvx
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For some reason I thought you had a 5-wire reg/rec, but it is actually a 6-wire.ok, so I just take the brown and black straight to the battery, where does the white wire go to? Thanks
zippoman wrote:
I read that to mean 3 yellow wires, a brown wire, and a black wire with a white stripe.I got the r/r from Jeff @ Z1, its 5 wire to the plug 3 yellow,a brown and a black with a white off the r/r. I have changed my fuses to the blade type and checked all my connections in the harness.
Since it appears you have a 6-wire reg/rec, the information is different. The white wire would be the positive output wire to the battery, the black wire is the ground, and the brown wire goes to the brown wire that went to the old '77 regulator.
I'll edit the earlier post to avoid confusion.
The brown wire is the sense line for the regulator. Make sure it has the same voltage as the battery's positive post when the ignition is on and when the bike is running. It should be within a half volt or so. If not, then the fuse connections are dirty, or the ignition switch connections are dirty, or the wiring and connectors are bad somewhere. You can fix all that, upgrading the wires a size larger, or you can do the relay-powered ignition-coil mod. That would take some of the load off the main fuse and divert it through the relay instead. The details are on Wiredgeorge's website.
Post edited by: loudhvx, at: 2007/04/14 13:28
1981 KZ550 D1 gpz.
Kz550 valve train warning.
Other links.
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- zippoman
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Ok. hooked it up and seemed to work till I turned the key off. The bike stayed running and lights got bright, ki;;ed it with the kill switch.I can unplug either the brown or black from the r/r and the key works. Ive done the coil mod so I guess thats why the kill switch works,any Ideas?
Something is definitely wired wrong. The key switch powers the kill switch, so either switch should kill the relay. Don't run it till it's figured out. You can burn the entire system with those conditions (key off and kill switch on).
1981 KZ550 D1 gpz.
Kz550 valve train warning.
Other links.
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