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after market brakelights flashing too fast
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after market brakelights flashing too fast
Hey I have a question for ya. My wife got me a a pair of streetfx elctro brake pods http://www.streetfxseries.com/brake-electropods.html for my bike.(2004 kawi zzr1200) they are little one inch rectangle pods that have 8 leds in each and flash when you apply your brake lights. Here is my problem . at 10 or 11 volts that i have at the brake light with the motor off they flash perfect. as soon as I start the motor and even at the same 11.8 volts ( I had everything on, heated vest, gloves, highbeams gps, satellite radio and brake lights) it now flashes way too fast, almost like a twinkle.. as soon as I shut the motor off it flashes normal. I called the manufacturer and they sent me a "noise filter" and when i put that inline it slowed the flashing down a tiny amount, but nowhere near enough . any idea of what i could put in line to slow the flashing down while the motor is running? ..........thanks .......skipTags: None
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Killer2600
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Head to Radio shack and get a pair of diodes ( 1 amp, 50 PIV ) and experiment. Put in series with wiring to your pod lights (observe forward polarity)- each diode will drop voltage by about .6 volts. One might be enough, but three might be required. But might flash real slow or not at all when engine ain't running.1981 gs650L
"We are all born ignorant, but you have to work hard to stay stupid" Ben Franklin
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Originally posted by tom203 View PostHead to Radio shack and get a pair of diodes ( 1 amp, 50 PIV ) and experiment. Put in series with wiring to your pod lights (observe forward polarity)- each diode will drop voltage by about .6 volts. One might be enough, but three might be required. But might flash real slow or not at all when engine ain't running.
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The device is suspect, but if it is good at 10.5V then maybe a simple regulator to keep the input voltage to the "pods" woudl work even when you rev the engine and the voltage goes up.
This is a simple device using also using a diode but it wll regulate to the specific voltage.
BZX79C10
BZX79C11
and a 30 ohm (use at least a 1 Watt resistor)
I played with the values for voltage ranges between 10-15 volts and you will have to be careful with both the diode or the resistor getting hot.
using a 10V zener and 30 ohm resistor there should be enough current to the two flashers by 12.5 volts
@15.5V P_Diode is 0.8Watts and P_resistor is 1 Watt
@16.0V P_diode is 1.0Watts and P_resistor is 1.2 watts
if you make one device for each pod then the Power values drop in 1/2 and the referenced devices might just work.
Last edited by posplayr; 04-28-2012, 05:42 PM.
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850GT_Rider
Seems like a lot of work for devices that should be designed to work at a nominal 12-13v.
I'd say they're defective.....
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Well, putting two diodes in series just caused the lights to dim with no effect on flashing- science can be cruel. This gizmo must be picking up on charging pulses and getting upset. Does this bike have a car type alternator or just a permanent magnet rotor/stator system? In the good old days we used to put noise filters on power feed to radios to eliminate static from the charging system. You would think the Chinese might have tested it, but maybe this unit is defective.1981 gs650L
"We are all born ignorant, but you have to work hard to stay stupid" Ben Franklin
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Originally posted by tom203 View PostWell, putting two diodes in series just caused the lights to dim with no effect on flashing- science can be cruel. This gizmo must be picking up on charging pulses and getting upset. Does this bike have a car type alternator or just a permanent magnet rotor/stator system? In the good old days we used to put noise filters on power feed to radios to eliminate static from the charging system. You would think the Chinese might have tested it, but maybe this unit is defective.
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UncleMike
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