Have you guys/gals observed this before?. When the engine is hot (like after riding for 20 minutes in a summer day), if I turn the engine off and then try to turn it back on, the battery doesn't have enough energy to start the engine again. It just sounds like a low battery. However, when the engine cools down just a bit (letting it rest for like 15 minutes), the battery doesn't sound low anymore and it turns the engine easily and immediately!.
The first time this happened I was convinced I had a dead battery. It could be that it just died out of old age; or that the generator (or equivalent device) in my bike wasn't doing its job anymore. But when I came back to the bike (after making some calls trying to arrange a rescue) it turned back on like nothing happened...
Today morning (I didn't use the bike during this past weekend) the engine started without incidents and the battery sounded like a fully charged one. So after I arrived here for work (a 20 minute ride from home), I tried to turn the engine back on right away... and as I suspected: the battery sounded like a dying one, without enough energy to turn the engine on again. By noon however, I when out to the bike and it turned on perfectly...
Has anybody here observed a similar behavior?.
I haven't entirely discarded the low battery theory yet; or the possibility that the re-charging system can be defective. However what confuses me it the relationship this behavior has with the engine temperature... and then I think that it could be something completely different, something beyond my basic knowledge; or maybe some particularity of the GS bikes with a solution known to some of you?.
The bike is a 1980 GS750E, and it has been working flawlessly since I got it in May. The worst of summer is gone now and the days are significantly cooler which throws another variable to my theory about engine temperature...
I would appreciate ANY sort of help, advice or ideas.
Thank you and salud,
Oscarin
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