I'm told everything is ok, but it's not charging. I test the stator leads and get exactly what the manual said I should get, 46+vac at 4k. I test the R/R and I get some bad readings doing the diode tests. Fast forward a week and the R/R arrives. The kid is in school, so I get the honor. After the install I test the charging system and I get around 14v @ 2k, but it decreases as the rpm build. At 5k, I'm getting 13.35v, still charging but it's strange that the voltage would decrease instead of increasing. I have a portable voltmeter I rigged for test rides, mainly for GSXR600's, but sometimes I put it on other bikes to monitor the voltage.
I have seen R/R that I've installed on GSXR600 test low right after install, but get better as I go along my test ride. Example is, preride test 13.7v and eventually get 14.3v around 1/2 to 3/4 of the 10 mile test ride. With that in mind I install my tester on the R6 and take it for a test ride. No change what so ever. At cruising speeds I get 13.3-13.5 volts as I slow down at stop signs, it increases. Best is 14v at 2K and it drops a little at idle. I'm not happy, but the boss says it's charging, move on to something else.
Ok now were up to yesterday. The R6 has been in the back showroom for about a week or two and I hear the salesman try to start it and I hear the starter running on and on. I stop what I'm doing and check it out. Just like before, nothing will shut it off. I push it back to my area and try to get the seat of quickly, but the battery wears down before I can get the seat off.
I pull the negative lead off the battery and hook up a charger to recharge the battery. In the mean time, I'm smacking the solenoid thinking that for some reason the new one is sticking on. This method works on old solenoids that wont work, so why not, eh. I'm looking at the harness, checking for continuity here and there, the starter button, whatever crosses my mind, but I get pulled to fix other things. That's ok the battery needs to be recharged anyway.
Here's where it get weird. Later I get a chance to mess with it again. I hold the negative battery lead to the post and nothing. I don't want to bolt it to the terminal, in case the starter runs on again, so I hit the starter button and it fires up, but the starter is still going. I lift the negative lead off the battery and the bike keeps running. WTF? That's not suppose to happen. I can see the headlights shinning off the wall, but they seem to be flickering a little, not as strong as when the negative lead is connected. I twist the throttle and it increases rpm. I turn off the ignition switch and the engine dies.
Another weird thing is if I do a continuity test with the negative lead disconnected with one test lead clamped to the neg lead and the other test lead to the negative battery terminal i get the continuity buzz. I started it multiple times and it keeps running when I remove the negative lead from the battery. The other end of the negative lead is bolted to the top of the engine case. I've looked at the wiring diagram and as far as I can tell the harness wires from the battery and solenoid are going where they are suppose to.
Ok gurus, how is this happening? The positive lead is connected on the battery, but that is all. I've seen older cars with alternators be able to run if you take off a battery lead, but I have never seen that happen with a stator based system. It has a new battery in it.
I'm off for the next two days, so I hope someone can shed some light on this.
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