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Dim taillight Q?

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    #16
    There are NOS key switches in Japan but they end up over $200 shipped. I'm conflicted whether I want to get one or work with what I have on the bike.

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      #17
      I believe the wide band O2 sensor heater had weakened the battery the battery when I was testing. After a good charge the engine off reserve voltage is much better, the circuits through the switch are still a volt and a half lower than the battery. I've cleaned a few connections and sprayed the connectors with electrical contact cleaner. A jumper from the battery + to any of the 3 switched fuses still makes a big difference in the brightness of all of the bulbs. I'll continue to tune up what's there and consider whether I want to spend $200 for a nos switch or do the relay. I like the original key so I'm leaning towards a blade fuse holder and adding the relay.

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        #18
        Originally posted by Don R View Post
        There are NOS key switches in Japan but they end up over $200 shipped. I'm conflicted whether I want to get one or work with what I have on the bike.
        Relative to the tail light low voltage, its the swtich contact portion of the ignition switch that is the suspect, not the entire key swtich. THe electrical contact portion comes off the bottom of the key switch mecanism.

        http://webpages.charter.net/ddvrnr/GS850_1100_Emblems.jpg
        Had 850G for 14 years. Now have GK since 2005.
        GK at IndyMotoGP Suzuki Display... ... GK on GSResources Page ... ... Euro Trash Ego Machine .. ..3 mo'cykls.... update 2 mocykl


        https://imgur.com/YTMtgq4

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          #19
          I've wondered about repairing the electrical section. I had a Honda CB750F that had the bottom crumble off the switch, it was just the cover part, so I coated the terminals with liquid tape.
          On a whim I ordered the new switch, I got an ebay offer, which was basically free shipping. I may use the bottom part with the lock cylinder that I have. I'll plug it in and then check into repairing what's there now.

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            #20
            Originally posted by Redman View Post

            Relative to the tail light low voltage, its the swtich contact portion of the ignition switch that is the suspect, not the entire key swtich. THe electrical contact portion comes off the bottom of the key switch mecanism.
            Exactly. The way I read the Suzuki wiring diagrams, all the amps being used have to go through the little switch contacts.
            (I hope to use the ignition switch contacts to only activate a relay and let the relay handle the load.)
            Jim, in Central New York State.

            1980 GS750E (bought used June,1983)
            1968 CB350 Super Sport (bought new Oct,1968)
            1962 CA77 305 Dream (bought used Feb,1963)

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              #21
              I've been ignoring the dim lights, haven't noticed anything getting worse. I tested that new old stock switch with no voltage improvement. I did clean a few connections and add a pair of ground wires, one to the taillight area and one to the frame near the engine ground. I still have the Polaris rec/regulator in place under the seat and my plan is to remove the old R/R and put a Bosch relay there to feed the switched fuses directly from a blade fuse holder.
              I helped a friend with wiring on a 52 chevy street rod truck who had a poorly wired fan relay tonight. That got me thinking about it again.

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                #22
                Don,what's the output of your bike's voltage when you touch a voltmeter to the + & - of the battery terminals while it's running at different rpms ?

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                  #23
                  I've lived with the GS1100 for a while now and gotten the new carbs and jetting process underway. I got a new old stock ignition switch from Japan and see no difference in voltages at the fuse panel or improvement in the brightness of the lights. The charging system is working properly, battery tested, and load tested and replaced. I checked the rotor spinning on the crankshaft, polished, lapped it and re-tightened it.
                  The path from the main fuse/red wire to the switch and back through the orange to the other three fuses still loses a volt even though I cleaned the contacts and tried the new switch.
                  I've followed the wiring diagram in the Haynes manual and see how the light switch gets power from the red/white, white/green and the orange. Green/white was fed from the alternator and white/red was fed from the V/reg.
                  The Polaris regulator is wired directly to the battery. I may swap to a blade type fuse holder and try to power these two wires through a fifth fuse. The new Rec/Reg is under the seat where the air cleaner box would be and the old style one is still in place, when it is removed it will leave a nice place for a relay if needed.
                  Last edited by Don R; 08-30-2024, 01:20 PM. Reason: edited for grammar improvement

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                    #24
                    I was studying the wiring diagram in the Haynes manual, I looked at the red/white and white/green that go to the headlight switch, they formerly connected the V/Reg and the Alt. through the headlight switch. While checking with the engine on and lights on high, blinking etc. I felt hot wires in the bundle near the battery.
                    It was the red feed from the main fuse towards the ign. switch. While following the hot red wire into the harness I discovered another unconnected red male end. So, I made a jumper, male to double female bullet connectors and plugged both reds into the main fused feed. Now, no wires are getting hot, the voltage at all fuses is higher and I'm assuming volts and both ends of the bike are higher also. It's daytime but the lights seem brighter. With a full tank the gas gauge now goes all the way to 3/4. That's also an improvement.
                    I don't understand it and also am willing to accept the idea that I don't need to.

                    The charging volts at the battery are within spec, engine on and off, another load tested new battery, the alternator wires all have been tested multiple times, AC volts are good, nothing to ground, flywheel not spinning on the shaft, the charging system is working fine. New polaris/indian style regulator. ground wires added. Issues were in the harness. Hopefully cured.
                    WooHoo!
                    Last edited by Don R; 08-31-2024, 04:36 PM.

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                      #25
                      Originally posted by Don R View Post
                      I was studying the wiring diagram in the Haynes manual, I looked at the red/white and white/green that go to the headlight switch, they formerly connected the V/Reg and the Alt. through the headlight switch. While checking with the engine on and lights on high, blinking etc. I felt hot wires in the bundle near the battery.
                      It was the red feed from the main fuse towards the ign. switch. While following the hot red wire into the harness I discovered another unconnected red male end. So, I made a jumper, male to double female bullet connectors and plugged both reds into the main fused feed. Now, no wires are getting hot, the voltage at all fuses is higher and I'm assuming volts and both ends of the bike are higher also. It's daytime but the lights seem brighter. With a full tank the gas gauge now goes all the way to 3/4. That's also an improvement.
                      I don't understand it and also am willing to accept the idea that I don't need to.

                      The charging volts at the battery are within spec, engine on and off, another load tested new battery, the alternator wires all have been tested multiple times, AC volts are good, nothing to ground, flywheel not spinning on the shaft, the charging system is working fine. New polaris/indian style regulator. ground wires added. Issues were in the harness. Hopefully cured.
                      WooHoo!
                      Yeah !!
                      I'm glad to hear you have your electrical system sorted Don;happy Labor Day weekend.

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                        #26
                        Happy for you. I think we all deserve a bigger pic than your avatar of the bike that beat the GPz 1100 in the quarter mile in 1981!
                        1982 GS1100E V&H "SS" exhaust, APE pods, 1150 oil cooler, 140 speedo, 99.3 rear wheel HP, black engine, '83 red

                        2016 XL883L sigpic Two-tone blue and white. Almost 42 hp! Status: destroyed, now owned by the insurance company. The hole in my memory starts an hour before the accident and ends 24 hours after.

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                          #27
                          Thanks, I've yet to master the art of shrinking a pic that will copy on this site. I've tried the bike of the month submission multiple times.

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                            #28
                            Nice to see that you (might) have your problem solved, but for anyone else using this for a reference, do a quick voltage check as part of your troubleshooting process. No not the usual type, one that isolates parts of the system.

                            I don't know the details on the wiring layout on your 1100E, but most GSes have the same basic layout. Under the tank, you will find the connector that goes to the ignition switch. There are usually four wires in it: Red, Orange, Gray and Brown. With the bike running, put your voltmeter probes in the red and orange parts of the connector. You SHOULD see a number very close tom if not actually, ZERO. The larger the number, the more voltage you are dropping in the switch contacts themselves. If the red/orange drop is not bad, check the red/brown contacts. The brown wire has its own contact in the ignition switch and goes straight to the tail light, so it could be bad (giving you low voltage output) even though the rest of the bike is good.
                            I ride many bikes.
                            Some are even Suzukis. :D

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                              #29
                              Thank you for that info. I'll have the tank off soon to re-jet the carbs so that will be a good time to check it.

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                                #30
                                I got in an after dark ride tonight, the lights are significantly brighter than they were before connecting the hidden wire. I was behind my wife in her car and she noticed the difference. I may still do something in the way of an LED taillight.
                                My GL1000 has a pair of additional Drag Specialties lights in the back, they are running and brake lights, next to the license plate. I like the added light but the style is wrong for a GS1100e.

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