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Hard to start when its hot.
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Forum GuruCharter Member
GSResource Superstar
Past Site Supporter- Oct 2002
- 8858
- Angeles Forest, So.Calif./Red rocks of Southern Utah.
Originally posted by Don LobaczAnd on the seventh day,after resting from all that he had done,God went for a ride on his GS!
Upon seeing that it was good, he went out again on his ZX14! But just a little bit faster!
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Don Lobacz
I would not recommend doing it at all, ever. I was hoping some of the electrical technicals would jump in and fill in details.
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hoyterb
Kieth What Don is saying is the R/R will "see" a completely dead battery and try to charge it.In other words the voltage output allowed by the R/R will be about 16-17 volts and max amps which WILL let the smoke out of the electrics.
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Motorcyclemodeller
I have an 82 750EZ, it does the same thing for as long as I can remember. Even when mine is cold it does not crank as fast as my brothers 83 1100ED. I replaced all main cables with 6 AWG power wire and used gold plated connectors, new battery, nothing has changed it. Now my motor is highly modified with high compression, so this is a contributing factor. When my bike is hot, I leave it until the motor temp comes down to about 100.......no choke....no throttle....hit the starter and up she goes. You can try going to a colder set of plugs...this often helps, by not letting the motor get as hot in the first place.
I will be tring two things next season:
Replace the starter bushings
Replace the bushing springs
I basically have just learned to live with it............GS quirk.......maybe!
The Good Doctor
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Forum GuruCharter Member
GSResource Superstar
Past Site Supporter- Oct 2002
- 8858
- Angeles Forest, So.Calif./Red rocks of Southern Utah.
Originally posted by hoyterbKieth What Don is saying is the R/R will "see" a completely dead battery and try to charge it.In other words the voltage output allowed by the R/R will be about 16-17 volts and max amps which WILL let the smoke out of the electrics.And on the seventh day,after resting from all that he had done,God went for a ride on his GS!
Upon seeing that it was good, he went out again on his ZX14! But just a little bit faster!
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Anonymous
Now my 1100 is doing this, I've had my starter apart a few months ago and everything was within spec. Could the heat itself make the starter work poorly? After going for a rip I have to wait half an hour for it to start properly, if I try right away the bike won't turn over at all. After riding for a few blocks the bike won't start either so it happens quickly. If I'm at home working on the bike I can start it over and over again with no trouble.
Any ideas?
Thanks in advance, Steve
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Anonymous
Originally posted by Don LobaczI would not recommend doing it at all, ever. I was hoping some of the electrical technicals would jump in and fill in details.
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Anonymous
Originally posted by srivettNow my 1100 is doing this, I've had my starter apart a few months ago and everything was within spec. Could the heat itself make the starter work poorly? After going for a rip I have to wait half an hour for it to start properly, if I try right away the bike won't turn over at all. After riding for a few blocks the bike won't start either so it happens quickly. If I'm at home working on the bike I can start it over and over again with no trouble.
Any ideas?
Thanks in advance, Steve
I have seen dozens of hot starting problems caused by heat. 99% of the time, a new starter (rewound, not just rebuilt) will solve the problem.
Batteries do not generally fail in high temp. It's the cold that lowers output, not heat.
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Hoomgar
Originally posted by basarajOriginally posted by srivettNow my 1100 is doing this, I've had my starter apart a few months ago and everything was within spec. Could the heat itself make the starter work poorly? After going for a rip I have to wait half an hour for it to start properly, if I try right away the bike won't turn over at all. After riding for a few blocks the bike won't start either so it happens quickly. If I'm at home working on the bike I can start it over and over again with no trouble.
Any ideas?
Thanks in advance, Steve
I have seen dozens of hot starting problems caused by heat. 99% of the time, a new starter (rewound, not just rebuilt) will solve the problem.
Batteries do not generally fail in high temp. It's the cold that lowers output, not heat.
See it here --> http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum...20750&start=30
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