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? about wiring system on bikes with kickstarters.
- Bud1
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Just curious questions that have been bugging me ever since I installed my new battery.:huh:
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- steell
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With a kickstarter you have the option of pushing a button, or kickstarting it like a man
Bikes with electric starters need a bigger battery, and thus a charging system with a higher charging capacity, than bikes with kickstart only.
A battery is still required, because at low rpm the charging system don't put out enough current to keep the lights bright enough. The old BSA's, Triumph's, Nortons, etc were kickstart only (Ok, so Norton went to electric start in 75, I'm showing my age again), but still had batteries, and charging systems by Lucas, AKA "The Prince of Darkness"
KD9JUR
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- Bud1
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Thanks for the info!
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- loudhvx
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If you don't use electric start, you can use much smaller batteries. Some bikes may actually lose a little battery power if idling with lights on. On those bikes (77 KZ650 comes to mind) the battery may die if the bike was left idling all day long. This is true even when the charging system is working like new. (It's actually more of the fault of the regulator rectifier design on the 77 650). But who let's their bike idle all day long? Cops? Maybe.
On bikes (maybe I should say "on KZ's") with permanent magnet alternators, you can usually go without the battery altogether. You just need a capacitor instead. I occasionally go without the battery on my KZ550. The 400/4, 500/4, 550/4 family did not ever have kick-start, I believe. SO I bump-start the bike, usually in two footsteps on a good day with the bike warm. (4-cyl bikes are easier to start than a twin of the same displacement.)
1981 KZ550 D1 gpz.
Kz550 valve train warning.
Other links.
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- ibsen22000
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The same charging system and batteries are often used on bikes without starters. This is because the same model may have the starter as an option. The KZ400 S has the same charging system as the electric start model, but doesn't have a starter.
The S model with a kick starter only doesn't have the same battery(5,5AH) as the model with an electric starter(12AH) though.
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- loudhvx
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But my friend's kick-only S had the big battery, the same as my other friend's 400 D with the starter. They're 1 year apart though. Maybe someone modified the S to take the big battery? To put in a starter but never finished?
Either way, we replaced the battery with a small scooter battery.
I still have the battery we pulled out, it's a 12N12A4A1. I was saving it for one of my 550's.
Post edited by: loudhvx, at: 2005/10/30 12:38
1981 KZ550 D1 gpz.
Kz550 valve train warning.
Other links.
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- Bud1
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- ibsen22000
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The battery for the S models:
www.yuasabatteries.com/battery.asp?bID=B83&vID=4230
And for the D models:
www.yuasabatteries.com/battery.asp?bID=B101&vID=4245
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- loudhvx
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loudhvx, it is not only the capasity that is different, but also the dimensions , 135mm x 60mm x 130mm vs 134mm x 80mm x 160mm.
The battery for the S models:
www.yuasabatteries.com/battery.asp?bID=B83&vID=4230
And for the D models:
www.yuasabatteries.com/battery.asp?bID=B101&vID=4245
Yes, I understand that, but his S model had the bigger battery in it for some reason.
1981 KZ550 D1 gpz.
Kz550 valve train warning.
Other links.
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- loudhvx
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Thanks for all the input. I was just wondering. I can't go without a battery at all!
I don't really see why not unless you don't have a kick starter. As long as the charging system is working correctly, your bike can probably go batteryless (with a capacitor as mentioned above).
A bad battery can draw down a charging system. By putting in the new battery, you eliminated the draw. But the new battery isn't putting any more voltage to the bike than the regulator will allow.
Post edited by: loudhvx, at: 2005/11/03 13:42
1981 KZ550 D1 gpz.
Kz550 valve train warning.
Other links.
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- Spock
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The battery levels out the pulsating DC from the Rectifier. This is also why the battery eliminator is a large capacitor. The Capacitor also levels out the voltage.
It is hard to charge a coil with pulsating DC. So trying to run a bike on the output of the regulator alone will give you a weak spark.
Spock
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