I have a 1980 GS850GT. I had it running pristine, new plugs, oil, cleaned carbs, etc... But I needed to remount some front lights as I had taken off an old Vetter fairing that came with the bike. Whoever installed it used splice connecters to attach the fairing plug to the harness, so all of the original female connectors were there. I plugged in the OEM signals from the rear end up front to test and they were working fine, but when I plugged in the headlamp that I pulled from the fairing, things went downhill fast.
First a 10A fuse blew, which I replaced with a 15A as per the manual. This worked for a few minutes, but then it blew again. When it did, suddenly the ignition switch ceased to turn off any running lights, including the speedo/tach/indicator lamps. I had to unplug them from the harness to turn them off. Then a second fuse, the third one down, blew, and after that happened, the left-hand ignition coil become too hot to touch. I begun to smell burning and with the ignition switch not killing any circuits, I had to disconnect the battery.
Does anyone have any idea of what may have happened? I'm certain I made a bad connection when plugging in the headlamp, maybe a positive lead to something brushed up against a ground, but the fuses blew as they should when that happened the first time. The worst case scenario I can imagine is that a bad connection was made for long enough for some wires to become melted together, which would explain the ignition switch not killing anything when in the off position. That's something I don't mind sitting down and fixing, but what concerns me is why the ignition coil became as hot as it did. I didn't try to run the starter during all of this, but does power run through the coils regardless? I'm stumped, and a little worried that I'm going to have to drop some money on a new coil. Everything relating to the electrical appears to be stock, so unfortunately I can't blame any of my troubles on bad parts.
Any advice is much appreciated. I may be in a little over my head here because I don't have any electrical working equipment besides a 99-cent voltmeter, so I can't do resistance checks or anything like that.
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