J
Jburr
Guest
I have blown 2 headlamps in the the last month. When testing my battery with a volt meter, I am getting a reading of nearly 18 volts when I rev the engine. I am guessing that is too high? Need a new regulator?
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I have blown 2 headlamps in the the last month. When testing my battery with a volt meter, I am getting a reading of nearly 18 volts when I rev the engine. I am guessing that is too high? Need a new regulator?
thanks for the input. this confirms my suspicions and gives me some things to try.
I haven't had to change a headlight bulb since I installed a series R/R. I used to go through them every three or four months until my old shunt type R/R showed obvious signs of over voltage. At that rate it has already paid for itself.
It just shows that my old R/R was bad for a long time until it got bad enough to boil my battery out. At that point I started learning about charging systems. Good voltage regulation, no bulbs burning out. You were lucky with R/R's and probably knew enough to do the proper maintenance. I was totally new to these bikes when I got this one.
So if Tkent never used a Honda unit, kept his bikes charging in descent order, the regulator section of the R/R may very well have never failed on any of his bikes as temperature is the dominate failure mode for the R/R.
From my detailed analysis on the subject, the only way to over charge is either
- you have an old R/R that only controls one leg of the stator.
- the regulator portion of the R/R has to go bad.
- You put a 6 wire Honda R/R sense point in a really bad place(low voltage point WRT battery voltage).
Other than 3.) above Dirty connections CAN NOT cause over charging , they always result in UNDER CHARGING.
So if Tkent never used a Honda unit, kept his bikes charging in descent order, the regulator section of the R/R may very well have never failed on any of his bikes as temperature is the dominate failure mode for the R/R.
It seems to me that a bad RR ground connection would not allow the RR to shunt the excess output to ground, causing overcharging....
A shunt regulator shunts excess voltage to ground. No ground, no shunt, no regulation. With Ohm's law, resistance to ground increases, current flow (regulation) decreases. Go undo the ground to your shunt RR, I'll bet the charging voltage goes way up.Explain that in terms of ohms law. I don't think it is possible other than how I described.