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Coil Mod - should I do it?

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    #16
    I suggest this mod 100%. Its a more efficient way of powering the coils that what suz had in mind. It gives the coils the proper amount of power as well as cleaner power.

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      #17
      Originally posted by piester View Post
      I suggest this mod 100%. Its a more efficient way of powering the coils that what suz had in mind. It gives the coils the proper amount of power as well as cleaner power.
      Your power is polluted? Too much "noise"?
      1983 GS 1100E w/ 1230 kit, .340 lift Web Cams, Ape heavy duty valve springs, 83 1100 head with 1.5mm oversized SS intake valves, 1150 crank, Vance and Hines 1150 SuperHub, Star Racing high volume oil pump gears, 36mm carebs Dynojet stage 3 jet kit, Posplayr's SSPB, Progressive rear shocks and fork springs, Dyna 2000, Dynatek green coils and Vance & Hines 4-1 exhaust.
      1985 GS1150ES stock with 85 Red E bodywork.

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        #18
        I use this for my horns also. While considering the "wake the dead" horns that bwringer uses, I implemented the circuit and found the stock horns adequate, saving me $40 and keeping me from having those ugly aftermarket brutes hanging from my bike.

        Comment


          #19
          Wow - thank you all very much for the replies. Looks like I have work to do this weekend! I have some wire shopping and baseline testing to do tomorrow. Will keep you posted....

          Originally posted by Steve View Post
          1. You are quoting others, why not quote Nessism, too? "To measure is to know." If those numbers are your readings, something needs to be done, but only after knowing the conditions under which those readings were taken. Was the ignitin switch ON, but the engine OFF? Was the engine running over 3,000 rpm? The voltage at the coils should be measured with the engine running.
          Steve-very much respect your opinion as I've read a lot of your replies to other posts...I tested with engine off / ignition switch on only exactly as per Wired George site instructions. Are you saying that is incorrect? That I should test volts to coils with bike running?

          Originally posted by Steve View Post
          Doing just the coil relay mod or the headlight mod (or both) won't have anything at all to do with charging. In other words, if your voltage at the coils is only 9 volts, you do the coil mod and it goes to 13 volts, your voltage at the battery will remain the same. Don't do this mod to improve your charging capability. The coils are simple devices, they do not compensate for their output. If they only see 9 volts coming in, they simply put out less to the spark plugs. If, however, they were to monitor the output and try to keep it constant, drawing more power to do so, yeah, that could affect the load on the battery, but that is not the case. As long as your connections between the stator, regulator and battery are good, your charging will be good.
          I'm gonna go out a limb here and disagree with your disagreement of Lucabond's comment. If there is some thing, anything, within stock wiring that is causing an undue "draw"/"tax" on my charging sys causing my overall numbers (i.e. 12.6 @idle, 13.2v @2000rpm vs. 13.5 @ idle which is ideal per Stator Papers), then surely anything that draws power through the stock harness could be contributing to this. Including headlight and possibly coils too. Unless what you saying is that the sensing circuit in RR should compensate? I am therefore thinking that the coils and headlight relay mods are worth my time since those are "on" / sapping at all times. The horn it seems to me doesn't make much sense since it is only a "draw" when you actually push the horn button (which on my bike is almost never).

          Let the "discussion" continue (while I get busy working)....why they call if a "forum" I suppose

          Comment


            #20
            I'll give it a shot, Andrew. First, just to clarify. Let's define anything that provides voltage (and thus current) as a source. Let's define anything that uses voltage as a sink. Voltage out, source. Voltage in, sink.
            Before the engine is running, the battery is your only source. Everything else, including the starter, is a sink. Once the engine starts and the charging system is providing enough current, things change. The battery now becomes a sink, whereby the charging system is providing all voltage/current needed to run everything, including charging the battery if it needs it. That is why the voltage at the battery prior to starting the engine is ~12.4v (roughly 2.1v per cell minus a small bit of loss x 6). After the engine is running, voltage should be around 13.4v or so (give or take). The charging system is providing all the power the bike needs, and the battery can actually be unplugged and the bike will still run. We take our measurements at the battery b/c it is convenient. But it is the charging system (I would normally say alternator, but we don't have one) running the show.
            Continuing this analogy, the coils, lights, even the horns are sinks. This is why the voltage provided to them is important. They were designed to operate at 12v+ back when they were first designed/built. But, just like us, time has taken its toll. My horns, for example, were seeing ~9.8v. When I pressed the button, it sounded like a weak 68 VW beetle. Once I put a relay in place, it now sounds like two VW beetles. Well, at least now it is seeing a true 12v+ again and sounds like it did the day it was built.
            The coil, another sink, is basically a voltage amplifier. Let's say it is a 200:1 amplifier (IDK what ours are, this is simply an example). So, if we input 12v, it is amplified to 24000v. If our voltage to the coil drops to say, 10v, the output voltage also drops, to 20000v. Etc., etc. Because of this amplification factor, a voltage drop at the coils can become extremely significant.
            Lastly, the headlight. If it is designed for 12v, and we only provide 10v, it will be 10/12 as bright as designed, or 83% its designed output.
            Finally, current. Current burns switches and contacts. Pure and simple. If you can decrease the amount of current going through a switch or contact, that switch or contact will last longer. This is yet another reason to use your switch or contact to activate the relay, and let the relay pass the high current amounts to the appropriate device.
            Hope this helps.

            Comment


              #21
              Originally posted by andrewpogany View Post
              Steve-very much respect your opinion as I've read a lot of your replies to other posts...I tested with engine off / ignition switch on only exactly as per Wired George site instructions. Are you saying that is incorrect? That I should test volts to coils with bike running?
              Personally, yes, I would test with the engine running. Isn't that when low voltage would be a problem? The least you could do is to compare what you see at the coils with what you see at the battery under the same conditions. With the headlight on and the coils drawing power, your battery is already under about a 10-amp load. Depending on the condition of the battery, it might only drop a volt or it might be several volts. By the way, I have not seen Wired George's instructions, so I don't know what they are. By the way, you want a REAL eye-opener? Watch the voltage at the coils when you hit the starter button.. THAT is when coil voltage is critical.



              Originally posted by andrewpogany View Post
              I'm gonna go out a limb here and disagree with your disagreement of Lucabond's comment. If there is some thing, anything, within stock wiring that is causing an undue "draw"/"tax" on my charging sys causing my overall numbers (i.e. 12.6 @idle, 13.2v @2000rpm vs. 13.5 @ idle which is ideal per Stator Papers), then surely anything that draws power through the stock harness could be contributing to this. Including headlight and possibly coils too. Unless what you saying is that the sensing circuit in RR should compensate? I am therefore thinking that the coils and headlight relay mods are worth my time since those are "on" / sapping at all times. The horn it seems to me doesn't make much sense since it is only a "draw" when you actually push the horn button (which on my bike is almost never).

              Let the "discussion" continue (while I get busy working)....why they call if a "forum" I suppose
              OK, now I'm going to disagree with your disagreement of my disagreement.

              Allow me to explain. The headlight has a filament with a fixed resistance, so is going to allow a certain amount of current to flow through it. Nothing changes that for any given headlight. If there are some dirty connectors in the supply line or grounding circuit for that headlight, they are going to see the same amount of current. The crud in those connections are going to have some resistance, so will rob some of the voltage from the headlight. Ohm's law says that in a closed circuit, all voltage rises will be matched by the voltage losses, the current remains the same. If you feed the headlight with a different circuit with fewer, cleaner connections (the headlight relay mod), the headlight will still have the same amount of current flowing through it, but it will see more voltage because nothing has been hampering the current flow. As far as the battery is concerned, the headlight will draw the same current with either circuit.

              The charging circuit is completely separate. The stator is excited by the magnets in the rotor and puts out some current. That current goes to the rectifier and regulator, then to the battery. Since the battery can't tell whether the headlight is drawing its current through wires with dirty connections or clean ones, it is providing the same current. Because it is providing the same current to the bike, the charging is unaffected. Oh, and the stock R/Rs didn't have a sense wire, so you can't count on that in the original configuration.

              What will be affected by these mods is the voltage available at the various devices. Yes, I am familiar with the concept of heavy draw through small wires drawing down the voltage. That is why it helps so much to put in better wires when you do the mod. But it all comes back to Ohm's law, the current will remain the same, but since there are fewer voltage drops due to unwanted resistance, there is more voltage for the intended load.

              Does this make sense?

              .
              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.)

              Comment


                #22
                Ok I agree the general point of what Steve has said, but be careful with how you think of a lamps resistance; they are not ohmic so they do not have a fixed resistance. The resistance changes as the filament gets hot.
                So
                snip<"The headlight has a filament with a fixed resistance, so is going to allow a certain amount of current to flow through it. Nothing changes that for any given headlight">snip
                is not quite true.
                Other than that what he says...

                Comment


                  #23
                  Originally posted by KiwiGS View Post
                  Ok I agree the general point of what Steve has said, but be careful with how you think of a lamps resistance; they are not ohmic so they do not have a fixed resistance. The resistance changes as the filament gets hot....
                  You are very correct, but I was just trying to minimize the variables and keep it in simple terms for the layman.

                  .
                  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.)

                  Comment


                    #24
                    It just seems to me if the bike's electrical system was made for load X and due to the old wiring and connectors the load is now load X plus then the system will not work as designed. No amount of cleaning will get some of these old harness's back into shape. WE already connect the RR's directly to the battery due to the losses in the original wiring same for the coils via the coil mod the other big draw is the headlight. I power my headlight and most of the dash lights via a coil. After doing the mod I noticed a marked improvement in the brightness of all. Taking this load off the old harness has also made my blinkers and tail light much brighter even though I didn't change the way they were powered. I have had a couple people tell me they thought my brake light was staying on until I hit the brakes they couldn't believe how bright it was. Just for kicks you could run a jumper direct from the battery to the headlight, see if the brightness increases then see what the voltage does at the battery at idle and 5k.Good luck

                    Comment


                      #25
                      Originally posted by Steve View Post


                      Allow me to explain. The headlight has a filament with a fixed resistance, so is going to allow a certain amount of current to flow through it. Nothing changes that for any given headlight. If there are some dirty connectors in the supply line or grounding circuit for that headlight, they are going to see the same amount of current.
                      Except if you add resistance in series with the bulb, such as a few corroded connectors here and there, you reduce the current, which reduces the voltage drop at the bulb. Voltage drops at each corroded connector add up, the total remains the same.

                      All the voltage drops add up to equal the system voltage, no?
                      http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v5...tatesMap-1.jpg

                      Life is too short to ride an L.

                      Comment


                        #26
                        Originally posted by tkent02 View Post
                        Except if you add resistance in series with the bulb, such as a few corroded connectors here and there, you reduce the current, which reduces the voltage drop at the bulb. Voltage drops at each corroded connector add up, the total remains the same.

                        All the voltage drops add up to equal the system voltage, no?
                        True, the voltage gains (battery supply) will equal the voltage drops (lights, coils, corroded connections, etc.), but the current doesn't really change that much due to the corroded connectors unless they are REALLY corroded. They are simply another voltage drop because of their resistance. Because you are dropping some voltage at the connectors, there is less voltage available at the light. The total current for that circuit will remain pretty much constant.

                        Nessism has it right, ... "to measure is to know".
                        Anybody have a badly corroded system that can measure the current draw, then do a relay mod and compare the current?

                        .
                        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.)

                        Comment


                          #27
                          Steve (et al please chime in) - so I try to run the volts test on the coil with bike running today and I can't get a reading. The meter is all over the place and when I tried to "dig" the probe into the coil +pos terminal, I got a bunch of sparking which had no effect on the bike running (but scared the sh*t out of me). BTW, for "control" test, I tested coils w bike off (as before) and got the same or close readings as before. Used same engine bolt as ground for both tests. Bad meter? Wtf am I doing wrong? Maddening.

                          Anyway, no coil mod prob this weekend since Shirazdrum is coming and will be spending night tomorrow. Went out today and no relay pigtail at other 2 local auto parts stores. Double arggghh. NAPA is only store left to check.

                          Trying to get the dang bike together to ride with Shirazdrum tomorrow and literally had a 4 wire plastic connector in the headlamp crumble in my hands an hour or so ago. Arggghhh. So now I gotta redo that whole mess in the morning.

                          THEN....go to pull car out of garage and it has dead battery (which is brand new less than a month ago so I just KNOW I got another problem there), so I can't move car out, and bike in to work on/put back together tonight since my shed has no electric and garage does, and not to mention as well as my intention of creating a parking spot for Shirazdrum tomorrow night )....TRIPLE arggghhh

                          How do mechanics "deal" from day to day?

                          Comment


                            #28
                            Originally posted by andrewpogany View Post
                            Steve (et al please chime in) - so I try to run the volts test on the coil with bike running today and I can't get a reading. The meter is all over the place and when I tried to "dig" the probe into the coil +pos terminal, I got a bunch of sparking which had no effect on the bike running (but scared the sh*t out of me). BTW, for "control" test, I tested coils w bike off (as before) and got the same or close readings as before. Used same engine bolt as ground for both tests. Bad meter? Wtf am I doing wrong? Maddening.
                            Not sure why you would have gotten any sparks, there should only be 10-14 volts there. One suggestion would be to use the battery for your ground, not an engine bolt. Using a bolt for a ground, you are relying on a good, corrosion-free connection between the bolt and the engine, then another connection from the engine to a ground wire, then another connection from the ground wire to the battery. Try to troubleshoot with as few unknowns as possible.


                            Originally posted by andrewpogany View Post
                            Went out today and no relay pigtail at other 2 local auto parts stores. Double arggghh. NAPA is only store left to check.
                            No need for a pigtail, just use insulated female spade connectors. If you can't find insulated connectors, use regular ones, but cover them with shrink wrap. Using a pigtail might sound like a good idea, but you are going to have to extend those wires to reach whatever it is you are trying to power with it, and there are more connections involved. If you solder those connections to prevent corrosion, that's OK, otherwise, you are just introducing more points to have corrosion.


                            Originally posted by andrewpogany View Post
                            Trying to get the dang bike together to ride with Shirazdrum tomorrow and literally had a 4 wire plastic connector in the headlamp crumble in my hands an hour or so ago. Arggghhh. So now I gotta redo that whole mess in the morning.
                            For a temporary repair for your ride, separate the four wires, wrap them in electrical tape. For a more permanent repair, look for new connectors at Vintage Connections or CRC2.


                            Originally posted by andrewpogany View Post
                            How do mechanics "deal" from day to day?
                            Not sure. Maybe they have a higher tolerance for that kind of stuff or they simply amuse themselved differently.
                            For the rest of us who are not mechanics, we tend to follow the advice that BassCliff posts in his Mega-Welcome:
                            Start at the headlight, check and clean EVERY connection between the headlight and tail light.By doing it all at one time you will assure yourself that everything is OK and you will find problems like crumbling connectors.

                            .
                            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.)

                            Comment


                              #29
                              I installed a coil relay in my '79GS550 a couple of weeks ago. It was the 3rd GS I've done the coil relay on but my 1st with points ignition. I was surprised at how fine gauge the coil wires were. No wonder they don't get much current after a few decades. I was impressed with the overall improvement after modifying my 1100s but was really blown away by the difference in the performance of the 550 with the coil relay. Starts are, without a doubt, the quickest I've xperienced on ANY bike. I've attached a pic of the relay and fuse holder I used for ease in finding one at the auto parts store. I bought mine at O'Reily's.
                              Willie
                              Common sense has become so uncommon that I consider it a super power.


                              Present Stable includes:
                              '74 GT750 Resto-mod I've owned since '79
                              '83 GS1100E (The best E I've ever enjoyed, Joe Nardy's former bike)
                              '82 GS1100G Resto project

                              Comment


                                #30
                                Shirazdrum has been here last 2 nights thankfully, he's a bit of an electrical genius, and thankfully also, even though we were supposed to be wrenching on HIS bike, he was happy to spend 80% of our wrenching time on MY bike -all while subjecting him to country music while wrenching.
                                What a great guy and great cause!

                                Anyway, turns out at least one definite problem all along has been the RR going bad and not working but INTERMITTANTLY (think light bulb going bad and flickering until dead). Extreme voltage spikes was causing the mysterious bike running good one day, bad the next, "healing itself" and running good again for no apparent reason, along with coils not getting proper voltage, along with plugs getting fouled in the process even though they had less than 200mi on them.


                                Originally posted by andrewpogany View Post
                                ... last post...including BassCliff told me read the Stator Papers and test my charging system. Prev thread below where bike drained battery and ran like crap and apparently "healed" itself.

                                http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum...ight=runs+crap

                                However, noone really has answered the question: can a drained battery alone cause the bike to run terrible (w/ Dyna S, etc)??
                                ANSWER: NOPE. BUT TOASTED RR SURE CAN! MORE...

                                Originally posted by andrewpogany View Post
                                ... all over 60, but it the readings were not "rock solid" and fluctuated occasionally - don't know if that matters; if so, how else to test?)
                                ANSWER: OH YEAH IT MATTERS Fluctuation is a BAD sign...readings should be virtually rock solid. If your readings are jumping around, suspect the RR. Shiraz showed my on his GS850 how the reading should look a bike with everything working properly which was "worth a 1000 words".

                                What finally solved it (thank you Shirazdrum - you ARE "the man"), was
                                1. Disconnect RR which take both RR and Stator out of spark loop.
                                2. Fully charge battery (make sure it's good)
                                3. Do coil mod to make sure coils getting full 12v and spark is good
                                4. Fresh plug (just to make SURE plugs are not contributing to problem).

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