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TPL
12.7V at idle and you are drawing on battery and not charging, If your going to keep your rides close to home then try it as it is and see. All the voltages you show are too low IMO.
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Rocketman
I agree. I'd like to see 14-14.2. Hitting Ebay this week for a replacement rr. Just wondering..I have a 5 wire rr now:
solid yellow to stator
white/blue stripe to stator
solid red (+)
White/black stripe (-)
White/Red Stripe ???????
Anybody know where this wire goes to?
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BassCliff
Originally posted by Rocketman View PostI agree. I'd like to see 14-14.2. Hitting Ebay this week for a replacement rr. Just wondering..I have a 5 wire rr now:
solid yellow to stator
white/blue stripe to stator
solid red (+)
White/black stripe (-)
White/Red Stripe ???????
Anybody know where this wire goes to?
It sounds like you still have the loop of wire to the (probably non-existent) headlight switch still in the circuit. The headlight switch would remove one phase of the stator when the headlight was turned off. This supposedly prevented over-charging the battery. You can take those wires out of the circuit and connect the three "yellow" output wires from the stator directly to the input wires of the r/r unit. See the stator replacement and R/R replacement guides on my website. This is explained in the Stator Papers too.
Thank you for your indulgence,
BassCliffLast edited by Guest; 05-30-2011, 06:24 PM.
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refeicul
well to test most of today's battery's you can get a gravity tester for your battery from an auto parts store they are about 2$. Now IF your r/r is bad i just replaced mine with a ricks electrosport r/r for not that much
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Rocketman
Before I pull the plug for an Electrosport (or any r/r), I just want to run this by you to see if its time.
Digital multitester plugged on battery posts.. original/oem setup first, and 2nd numbers with red r/r unplugged and by-passed directly to the battery (+) using an in-line 20 amp fuse...
............BEFORE ..........AFTER
Initial idle 13.37v ....... 12.90v
2500 rpm 14.03v ...... 13.28v
5000 rpm 13.89v ...... 13.40v
Seems when I did the by-pass to eliminate possible (+) side corrosion, the readings went down. Why?
Next, I tried the positive lead voltage drop as instructed using the r/r red output wire, etc. Multimeter started at only 4.1v at idle. When I opened throttle to 5000 rpm, it increased to 14.9v for about 5 seconds, then went back down to 4.1v for another 5 seconds, then back up to 14.9, etc., etc. and continued this cycle. Is this telling me anything significant?Last edited by Guest; 05-31-2011, 04:47 PM.
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TPL
Originally posted by Rocketman View PostBefore I pull the plug for an Electrosport (or any r/r), I just want to run this by you to see if its time.
Digital multitester plugged on battery posts.. original/oem setup first, and 2nd numbers with red r/r unplugged and by-passed directly to the battery (+) using an in-line 20 amp fuse...
............BEFORE ..........AFTER
Initial idle 13.37v ....... 12.90v
2500 rpm 14.03v ...... 13.28v
5000 rpm 13.89v ...... 13.40v
Seems when I did the by-pass to eliminate possible (+) side corrosion, the readings went down. Why?
Next, I tried the positive lead voltage drop as instructed using the r/r red output wire, etc. Multimeter started at only 4.1v at idle. When I opened throttle to 5000 rpm, it increased to 14.9v for about 5 seconds, then went back down to 4.1v for another 5 seconds, then back up to 14.9, etc., etc. and continued this cycle. Is this telling me anything significant?Last edited by Guest; 05-31-2011, 06:25 PM.
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Originally posted by Rocketman View PostBefore I pull the plug for an Electrosport (or any r/r), I just want to run this by you to see if its time.
Digital multitester plugged on battery posts.. original/oem setup first, and 2nd numbers with red r/r unplugged and by-passed directly to the battery (+) using an in-line 20 amp fuse...
............BEFORE ..........AFTER
Initial idle 13.37v ....... 12.90v
2500 rpm 14.03v ...... 13.28v
5000 rpm 13.89v ...... 13.40v
Seems when I did the by-pass to eliminate possible (+) side corrosion, the readings went down. Why?
Next, I tried the positive lead voltage drop as instructed using the r/r red output wire, etc. Multimeter started at only 4.1v at idle. When I opened throttle to 5000 rpm, it increased to 14.9v for about 5 seconds, then went back down to 4.1v for another 5 seconds, then back up to 14.9, etc., etc. and continued this cycle. Is this telling me anything significant?
If you are measuring from the R/R(+) plug to the Battery (+) you should be seeing less than 0.2V no more than 0.75 volts at 5000 RPM.
Something sound very fishy with (+) side voltage drop measurements; untill they make more sense it is hard to conclude anything.
Did the voltages go back up after restoring the original R/R? It is possibel the stator is dying in which case you would not be able to go back to the better volatges. Regardless the huge drops you are seeing don't make much sense.
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Originally posted by TPL View PostYour R/R is shot, as is mine. FH012AA mosfet simple.... Gray connectors get the stator wires, black connectors to the battery. I have one on order as well as a new stator.
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Rocketman
What you should have seen is either no change between the BEFORE and the AFTER or a slight increase in voltage.
Did the voltages go back up after restoring the original R/R?
If you are measuring from the R/R(+) plug to the Battery (+) you should be seeing less than 0.2V no more than 0.75 volts at 5000 RPM.Last edited by Guest; 05-31-2011, 07:31 PM.
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TPL
Originally posted by posplayr View PostThat pic is a bit simplified, it doesnt show the frame ground or harness ground. The positive side is only one way to connect the R/R.
I intend to ground as you have shown in your thread, I am also taking your advice to solder in stead of connect.
Now what about the positive side, why any other way?
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Originally posted by Rocketman View PostI agree and that's what I was hoping for by bypassing the hot lead through the harness and going direct to the battery (+), but everything went backwards. Used similar guage wire as the stock rr+, and thought it was the 20amp in-line fuse, but I doubt that had any impact.
Yes. Everything returned to normal after I re-plugged the red wire back into the original harness plug.
This confuses me, and I apologize again. But what exactly am I comparing the .2 to .75v drop to? Is it a before and after comparision, comparing the stock volts at 5,000 rpm, to the new volts with the multimeter connected to the rr(+), or is it the volts at idle vs. the volts at 5,000 rpm with the meter installed? And why the heck am I getting this cycling fluctuation between 4.1 and 14.9v? Is this test supposed to result in a steady voltage read out?Last edited by posplayr; 05-31-2011, 10:36 PM.
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Rocketman
I think my bike and I are feeling much better today. I spent the last two days replacing wire ends and connectors, pulled off the main ground wire and cleaned both ends of it up on a wire wheel. Cleaned and polished most every (+) and (-) connector I could reach involved with the charging system. I'm still going to solder the fuse box wires and replace all the fuses later, but for now, I think the new numbers sound OK:
Bike off with full charge.....13.03v
Lights on for 15 seconds ...12.40v
Initial Idle ......................12.85v
2500 rpm .......................14.13v
4000 rpm .......................14.00v
5000 rpm .......................14.00v
Final Idle ...................... 13.45v
These numbers seem improved over the previous ones, the battery will be charging better, so I think I am good to go. Will most likely replace the R/R anyway, as a 30 year old stock r/r could be questionable, but at least the urgency is out of the way.
Thanks for everyone's help and advice, and good talking to Duane. Who would have thought any one head could have such a wealth of electrical information?
We'll talk again.
Larry
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Originally posted by Rocketman View PostI think my bike and I are feeling much better today. I spent the last two days replacing wire ends and connectors, pulled off the main ground wire and cleaned both ends of it up on a wire wheel. Cleaned and polished most every (+) and (-) connector I could reach involved with the charging system. I'm still going to solder the fuse box wires and replace all the fuses later, but for now, I think the new numbers sound OK:
Bike off with full charge.....13.03v
Lights on for 15 seconds ...12.40v
Initial Idle ......................12.85v
2500 rpm .......................14.13v
4000 rpm .......................14.00v
5000 rpm .......................14.00v
Final Idle ...................... 13.45v
These numbers seem improved over the previous ones, the battery will be charging better, so I think I am good to go. Will most likely replace the R/R anyway, as a 30 year old stock r/r could be questionable, but at least the urgency is out of the way.
Thanks for everyone's help and advice, and good talking to Duane. Who would have thought any one head could have such a wealth of electrical information?
We'll talk again.
Larry
You should measure the voltage drops as shown here.
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Rocketman
I tried running a direct lead with a 20 amp fuse from the RR+ to the battery + to eliminate any potential voltage drops on that leg, and my voltage readings went down instead of up. No explanations were given as to how that could happen. So, trust me, I am taking your advice, but the results are confusing.
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Originally posted by Rocketman View PostI tried running a direct lead with a 20 amp fuse from the RR+ to the battery + to eliminate any potential voltage drops on that leg, and my voltage readings went down instead of up. No explanations were given as to how that could happen. So, trust me, I am taking your advice, but the results are confusing.
As you might have sensed, I did not particularly like those R/R connections (you new connections) but the test above would be an nonsubjective discriminator.
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