Steve
GS Whisperer
Personally, yes, I would test with the engine running. Isn't that when low voltage would be a problem? The least you could do is to compare what you see at the coils with what you see at the battery under the same conditions. With the headlight on and the coils drawing power, your battery is already under about a 10-amp load. Depending on the condition of the battery, it might only drop a volt or it might be several volts. By the way, I have not seen Wired George's instructions, so I don't know what they are. By the way, you want a REAL eye-opener? Watch the voltage at the coils when you hit the starter button.. THAT is when coil voltage is critical.Steve-very much respect your opinion as I've read a lot of your replies to other posts...I tested with engine off / ignition switch on only exactly as per Wired George site instructions. Are you saying that is incorrect? That I should test volts to coils with bike running?
OK, now I'm going to disagree with your disagreement of my disagreement.I'm gonna go out a limb here and disagree with your disagreement of Lucabond's comment. If there is some thing, anything, within stock wiring that is causing an undue "draw"/"tax" on my charging sys causing my overall numbers (i.e. 12.6 @idle, 13.2v @2000rpm vs. 13.5 @ idle which is ideal per Stator Papers), then surely anything that draws power through the stock harness could be contributing to this. Including headlight and possibly coils too. Unless what you saying is that the sensing circuit in RR should compensate? I am therefore thinking that the coils and headlight relay mods are worth my time since those are "on" / sapping at all times. The horn it seems to me doesn't make much sense since it is only a "draw" when you actually push the horn button (which on my bike is almost never).
Let the "discussion" continue (while I get busy working)....why they call if a "forum" I suppose
Allow me to explain. The headlight has a filament with a fixed resistance, so is going to allow a certain amount of current to flow through it. Nothing changes that for any given headlight. If there are some dirty connectors in the supply line or grounding circuit for that headlight, they are going to see the same amount of current. The crud in those connections are going to have some resistance, so will rob some of the voltage from the headlight. Ohm's law says that in a closed circuit, all voltage rises will be matched by the voltage losses, the current remains the same. If you feed the headlight with a different circuit with fewer, cleaner connections (the headlight relay mod), the headlight will still have the same amount of current flowing through it, but it will see more voltage because nothing has been hampering the current flow. As far as the battery is concerned, the headlight will draw the same current with either circuit.
The charging circuit is completely separate. The stator is excited by the magnets in the rotor and puts out some current. That current goes to the rectifier and regulator, then to the battery. Since the battery can't tell whether the headlight is drawing its current through wires with dirty connections or clean ones, it is providing the same current. Because it is providing the same current to the bike, the charging is unaffected. Oh, and the stock R/Rs didn't have a sense wire, so you can't count on that in the original configuration.
What will be affected by these mods is the voltage available at the various devices. Yes, I am familiar with the concept of heavy draw through small wires drawing down the voltage. That is why it helps so much to put in better wires when you do the mod. But it all comes back to Ohm's law, the current will remain the same, but since there are fewer voltage drops due to unwanted resistance, there is more voltage for the intended load.
Does this make sense? :-k
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