My buddy and i have a GS1000 project where a lithium-ion battery was used
because we needed something small enough to hide the battery in the tail section.
So, we hooked up all electrical including the SH-775 and worked on other projects.
This had been standing for at least 2 months, maybe 10 weeks.
When we could work on the bike again, we noticed the battery was really low.
Most of you will probably never experience this issue :
because you drive the bike more often, or have your battery on a trickle charger.
For a Li-ion battery the advice is to let it be for a month or 2 or even longer,
then hit it with a charge cycle.
This differs from lead or gel batteries, that benefit more from shorter periods
between charge cycles or a battery tender/trickle charger.
All we measured was a leak current of 1.1 mA (measured on a cheap-ass 5$ multimeter - YMMV)
Turned out this was drawn by the SH-775.
The temporary fix we used is a 40A relais between the positive from SH-775 to
battery, the relais being activated with a switched positive.
So as soon as the contact is activated, the relais closes and allows the
SH-775 to send power to the battery.
This way when the contact is switched off, the SH-775 cannot draw power anymore.
I did not have a large diode at hand but will replace the relais with one later.
Less wires, more elegant solution imho.
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