I have been irritated by the bounce in my electric gauges. I found that much of the problem is coming from the charging system R/R which is a chopping controller and does not provide a smooth output. here is some typical noise coming out of the R/R (0.5V per division)
I scrounged around for some parts to make a +12V reference regulator (low drop out) that would supply the gages on my ED. I ended up with some extra so i could make about 25 of these if there is interest. For the time and material it takes to do this, I would want about $30.0 to deliver CONUS it. So PM me if anybody is interested.
Any problems MONEY BACK for 1 year.
It is possible this would help the electronic gauges but someone will have to check to see if 500 mAmps is sufficent.
SEE_DETAILS_HERE
The regulator is protected for over voltage, short circuit , over current and thermal overload. It is made for Automotive applications and is a -40 to +125DegC part.
It is Low Drop Out (LDO) which means it will regulate with as little as +12.5V input. A GS noise level is minimal at this voltage because the R/R is not regulating yet.
I did a rev test with both gauges grounded and it worked great. Will be doing a road test as soon as it is installed on the bike.
Fits: GS 82-83 1100EZ/ED
82 GS750EZ
(Or any other source needing steady +12V at 0.5 Amps)
•Eliminates guage bounce due to chopping voltages from the R/R
•High bandwidth regulator (10 KHz) to provide a quiet filtered voltage to the gauges.
•Low Drop out design, Full operation with +12.5V from R/R Most noise is at high RPM operation when voltages are 14V and above.
•Max output current 500 mAmps
•(I measured my gauges and with both sensors grounded the max current was 350 mAmps.
•Input voltage +12 to 17Volts (It will handle anything the Standard GS will dish out)
•Designed for extended temp operations
•Parts are all -40 to +125DegC
Everything should tuck in nicely and the cover can be installed with nothing showing from the outside.
SEE_DETAILS_HERE
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