well, dunno, it charges ok over a prolonged period of time (during riding) as long as the headlight is off. i would assume that any problems with the stator would be exposed during such testing?
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Flat battery - why?
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pontiacstogo
Originally posted by psyguy View Postcould this be a problem with the battery?? the battery is new but it was a cheap chinese product...
any thoughts?
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When I see the words "cheap chinese" along with "battery" I envision a 20 dollar item made from recycled lead. Spend a little more and get a maintenance free battery, they have 3 year warranties.1981 GS650G , all the bike you need
1980 GS1000G Power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely
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Originally posted by psyguy View Postbefore i discard a new battery that cost $90Last edited by bonanzadave; 09-28-2009, 10:34 PM.82 1100 EZ (red)
"You co-opting words of KV only thickens the scent of your BS. A thief and a putter-on of airs most foul. " JEEPRUSTY
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Originally posted by pontiacstogo View PostThe first step in ANY charging system diagnosis should be a known good battery.
not keen on spending money randomly changing parts before i can confirm they are no goodGS850GT
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KiwiGS
A quick test, is to check the specific gravity of the cells. Use a hydrometer. Should be between 1.24 and 1.65. They are pretty cheap at supercheap or the like.
Or you could take the battery to an autosparky they should be able to check the specific gravity and give it a load test as well.
Cheers
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Originally posted by GS1100GKNot sure it is, but one thing is for certain. When he turns on the headlight switch, the charging situation is bad. Turns it off, the situation is good.
Either the draw is too much as Jim speculated and is a definite possibility, or the circuit is doing something bad.
Possibilities right now (tell me if I missed one)
1. Bad r/r
2. Bad main chassis ground
3. Bad r/r ground or r/r positive (Jim was testing this part)
4. Bad stator to r/r connectors (Jim was testing this part, and Psyguy eliminated the headlight circuit from the r/r loop, which helps)
5. Bad headlight switch (needs cleaned, etc- high resistance)
6. Bad high/low beam switch (see headlight switch)
7. Bad harness or connectors for the headlight (partially indicated by >10% voltage drop)
8. Bad headlight circuit ground (causes high resistance and too high load)
9. Bad bulb or socket (?? not sure about this one, but he's checking just about everything else ??)
10. Anyone have something to add here?
These aren't in any particular order and some have been at least partially tested.
- JC
Are all three stator leads directly connected to the r/r?
If not, I would suspect that lead that goes up to the headlight switch or a dead leg in the stator.
I presume that output checks were made on the stator?
I saw some mention of repairing/replacing the headlight switch, but was not sure if it was to repair the headlight connection or the stator wire connection.
.sigpic
mine: 2000 Honda GoldWing GL1500SE and 1980 GS850G'K' "Junior"
hers: 1982 GS850GL - "Angel" and 1969 Suzuki T250 Scrambler
#1 son: 1986 Yamaha Venture Royale 1300 and 1982 GS650GL "Rat Bagger"
#2 son: 1980 GS1000G
Family Portrait
Siblings and Spouses
Mom's first ride
Want a copy of my valve adjust spreadsheet for your 2-valve per cylinder engine? Send me an e-mail request (not a PM)
(Click on my username in the upper-left corner for e-mail info.)
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Originally posted by KiwiGS View PostA quick test, is to check the specific gravity of the cells. Use a hydrometer. Should be between 1.24 and 1.65. They are pretty cheap at supercheap or the like.
Or you could take the battery to an autosparky they should be able to check the specific gravity and give it a load test as well.
CheersGS850GT
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Originally posted by psyguy View Poststeve, post #107 is the current situation. thanks
One way to eliminate the battery as a possible cause:
Remove the battery. (Actually, you only have to remove the positive wire.) Use jumper cables, connect that loose positive wire to your car's battery, connect the negative terminals on the bike and car. You know your car's battery is good, don't you? If you still have falling voltage problems, I don't know what to suggest.
.sigpic
mine: 2000 Honda GoldWing GL1500SE and 1980 GS850G'K' "Junior"
hers: 1982 GS850GL - "Angel" and 1969 Suzuki T250 Scrambler
#1 son: 1986 Yamaha Venture Royale 1300 and 1982 GS650GL "Rat Bagger"
#2 son: 1980 GS1000G
Family Portrait
Siblings and Spouses
Mom's first ride
Want a copy of my valve adjust spreadsheet for your 2-valve per cylinder engine? Send me an e-mail request (not a PM)
(Click on my username in the upper-left corner for e-mail info.)
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bakalorz
Originally posted by psyguy View Postok, update...
i connected the new (used) RR i got from duaneage but the problem remains the same:
- charging OK with no load (14.5V)
- charging NOT OK when the headlight is ON (or when i connect a 55W light bulb directly to the battery) - the voltage starts slowly dropping
- all relevant connections are NEW
- RR connected directly to the battery
- stator puts out 85+V at 5000rpm
- all 3 stator phases go directly to the RR
- i would assume that the RR is good but wouldn't mind testing it while hooked off if there is a way to do that?
- the system has been tested with the engine just warmed up from cold as well as during a few hours of riding and the results are the same
any thoughts?
Ok, I just read the whole thread ... wow ...
My impressions, take em for what they're worth.
The battery ... Cheap chinese junk or not, probably not the problem.
My walmart special $30 battery is still fine after 3 years
A cheap battery with a good charging system = years of service
A $$$ battery with a shot charging system = Shot $$$ battery in a few weeks of riding.
The headlight system ... not the problem ... high resistance here would just keep the headlight dim, but actually slightly reduce the load on the charging system.
(although you should eventually fix this so you have a bright headlight, this will not cause the bike not to charge)
What this really sounds like to me is one phase not charging.
My bike acted very like this when I had a phase not charging.
headlight off would charge the battery (actually mine overcharged, because in addition to missing a phase, the regulator didn't regulate),
headlight on and the battery would slowly discharge due to the increased load.
(FWIW ... I rode my bike like this for over a year till I built a R/R ... the battery was shot when I got the bike, and this didn't help it, but it didn't damage anything else ... IF thats your problem, you could probably get away with it as long as you keep the battery charged ... OTOH this advice is only worth what you paid me for it and not one dime more ... So don't YOU ride till you fix it properly)
So what could cause a phase not to charge.
1) shot R/R (especially an open diode if you do the diode tests)
Probably not the case here since you tried two of them
2) Bad Stator
Possible ... you did the 80V tests and it passed, but I didn't read you doing them when the stator is hot.
Its not unusual that a short will be hidden when the stator is cold, but then as it warms up and expands, two pieces of metal that were seperated get pushed together and short out.
3) Bad connections in the wiring connecting the stator to the R/R
Very possible ...
I know you said you replaced connectors, but still ...
This was the cause of one of my charging issues.
On mine one of the bullet connectors did not make good connections.
this almost had me needlessly change my stator.
Where to go from here ...
The first thing to do (its even in my sig) is to replace the bullet connectors on the wiring between the stator legs and the R/R with spade connectors. The construction of bullet connectors just prevents them from making as good a connection (even when new)
Where else do you see anyone using bullet connectors ...
WTF was Suzuki thinking using them at all ...
Check the Stator voltage when hot ...
After that, I guess I'd get a new stator, but before doing that, just replace the stator wiring from where its soldered to the enameled part of the stator all the way to the R/R ... can't hurt and might catch some wierd break in the wire that only shows up when hot, or the wind presses on it, or the moon is in the 3 quadrant of venus, or whatever
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I sent him a set of new bullet connectors, there are new connectors on the wires of the RR. Whatever one feels about bullet connectors these are not damaged or corroded and are in fact new. lobbing them off for different connectors probably won't change anything.
The RR doesn't have any defective components. I tested it before sending it to him.
I would return to the stator as possible source, unless someone else has an idea.1981 GS650G , all the bike you need
1980 GS1000G Power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely
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