Electrical System
Sooner
or later you will need to find a failing component, a broken wire, or
a short. Or, you will attempt to add a new device to your motorcycle
and have to do some wiring. Following are a set of basics that seem
not to be taught anywhere except by experience:
Just because the motorcycle uses a 12 Volt battery does not mean
that LETHAL voltages don't exist. Spark plug leads carry many
thousands of Volts! Stay away from them.
The vast majority of 'failures' can be fixed with the simple
replacement of a fuse - particularly on older bikes that use
old-style fuses. If the failing fuse is not visibly burnt it is
often just fractured as a result of age.
Crimp connectors are a NO-NO on motorcycles. Vibration and
weathering will eventually make them fail. Solder all wire joints
you make and use a piece of shrink-wrap tubing to finish the job.
Solid wires are a NO-NO on motorcycles. Vibration tends to fracture
them. Always use stranded wire. (You should carry a length of
stranded wire as part of your 'tools'.)
Many circuits in modern motorcycles contain solid state devices
(transistors). These can be damaged if you use a test light on them.
Instead, use a high impedance (10-meg or greater) digital multimeter
to test voltage levels in these circuits.
Any connector that you can pull apart should be packed with
dielectric grease when you have put it back together again!
Dielectric grease is NON-CONDUCTIVE. It is used to keep contacts
within the connectors clean and to protect them from corrosion.
Connectors in a motorcycle's charging system will melt and fail
easily if those contacts are not perfectly maintained because the
slightest increase in resistance will cause a huge amount of heat
based on their large current loads.
Even with the master fuse pulled there is one great danger that
continues to exist in a motorcycle's electrical system - the starter
solenoid. Since the current load necessary to turn the starter motor
is so great, that circuit is NOT fused. Thus, if you happen to short
the solenoid your bike's starter motor will engage!
Whenever adding a component use a separate fuse and circuit for it.
Do not simply piggy-back on an existing circuit.
Whenever removing your battery always disconnect the NEGATIVE
terminal first. This insures that there will not be a disaster
should your screwdriver happen to slip while disconnecting the
positive terminal and it hits any bare metal.
If you smell gasoline, do NOT work on electrical systems!!!!!!!!
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