It could be the starter. Check the brushes..
-----Original Message----- From: bull city <[email protected]> To: Nighthawk Motorcycle Lovers! <[email protected]> Sent: Sun, Mar 7, 2010 11:29 am Subject: [Nighthawk Lovers] Re: '83 550 SC Electrical Issues So the dealership replaced my battery and I just checked it. When the ike has the ignition on but I haven't cranked it it's reading 12-13 olts. As soon as start it and disconnect the negative lead the oltage drops to 2-3 volts. It's a brand new battery that is cranking p perfectly. It's cranking and riding great... but I am sticking very lose to home until I have ok'd the charging system. So this test is not good, what do you reccomend looking at next? hat shou n Jan 25, 1:34 pm, Dennis Hammerl <[email protected]> wrote: good / no good ________________________________ From: bull city <[email protected]> To: Nighthawk Motorcycle Lovers! <[email protected]> Sent: Mon, January 25, 2010 4:25:59 PM Subject: [Nighthawk Lovers] Re: '83 550 SC Electrical Issues oops.. forgot to post to whole group. short story: 6000 miles, WPS battery (cheap), dealer forgot to have battery ready when they said they would and probably rushed to get it ready after that. what does g/ng mean? On Jan 24, 11:04 pm, Dennis Hammerl <[email protected]> wrote: > How interesting. You have a problem and have started to look in the wrong lace first. Your description is very good. Why ? Because it points in a totally ifferent direction than you are going in. Let's gather some information first. ow many miles are on this ? What brand is the battery and if you bought it from source that did the proper pre-delivery service before selling it to you. You ay it goes flat quite quickly. That is the sign of a poor battery. Was it load ested after being charged ? It matters not that it is new, a battery must be roperly serviced before being put into use. An improperly serviced battery will EVER be at 100% no matter what. A low quality battery that is not treated roperly before being placed in service will cause starting AND charging roblems. So much for part one. > #2 The question about mileage is important because the starter may be going ad. You've done a ton of work on this and probably started it quite often ithout riding it enough at any given time to recharge the battery. The starter ay be drawing a lot more than it should as well. > SO... Take the battery to a dealer ( I know and I don't want to hear it. EAL WITH IT) have it charged and tested on a load bank. G / NG ? > Once you resolve that issue, get the bike started and check the lternator output. A battery that has less than 10.5 volts will not have a unctional charging system. The charging system can be checked only with a good attery. All of your resistance checks indicate a good system. A check of the harging rate is called for. Do that with an ammeter inline with the battery. se an ammeter with a +- 10A range. Disconnect the ground cable from the battery nd hook up the ammeter inline with the battery. DO NOT START the bike this way. old the ground cable terminal against the battery post to start it. (trying to tart it through the ammeter will cause the ammeter to fail) Once running, eparate the terminal from the post and read the charge rate. Those bikes begin o charge at a point above 2000rpm. The charge rate will be high for a time and hen fall off as the battery is recharged. If the bike has no / low charge rate, here are further checks. > That's enough for now. > I'm not there, but I see a brand X battery that's been poorly serviced, bused by repeated starts and than ridden a short distance with a non-functional harging system.. then failed completely. If I hadn't seen this a thousand times lready, I wouldn't be quite so sure. I am. > Get PO'd at me and scream. I'm used to it. > ________________________________ > From: bull city <[email protected]> > To: Nighthawk Motorcycle Lovers! <[email protected]> > Sent: Sun, January 24, 2010 4:26:58 PM > Subject: [Nighthawk Lovers] '83 550 SC Electrical Issues > I had my $600 garage find running with a new battery and rebuilding > the clutch and front brake. After a couple of weekends of working on > it, and only taking ti out for about a 5 minutes ride the bike went > dead as I pulled into my driveway. I tried to restart but the battery > just didn’t have any power. > I let it sit for about two months as Christmas passed. I’m figuring > the problem is somewhere in the rectifier/ alternator. I went and got > the battery recharged at autozone, tried to restart the bike but the > battery just didn’t have the juice and went dead within 5 minutes (if > that) of trying to start it. > So I have not been able to do any running tests on the bike. But here > is what I have done: > Checked the rectifier using a multimeter to check resistance between > each of the 3 yellow leads to the green ground. It registered zero > ohms on each with one polarity, when the polarity was reversed there > was no current on any. So I am assuming that means it good. I found > this method on-line athttp://www.dansmc.com/electricaltesting.htm. I > have the manual but have no idea what the tests are that the manual > calls for (Sanwa SP-10D, etc...) > Checked the alternator by seeing if there is connectivity on the > winding. All yellow leads coming from the alternator show > connectivity. The manual says to check this on the “alternator side”of > the connector. I am assuming this means the winding is good. > The next step in the manual says to check resistance levels on the > “harness” side, which I am assuming is the leads to the rectifier? I > am NOT getting connectivity between the yellow leads going into the > rectifier. Is this what I am supposed to be doing? > Next is says to check between each yellow lead and the green ground, > which I have and it shows no connectivity, which it supposedly should > not. > I don’t have a running bike at this point to I cant check any running > tests. > So, what should I check at this point? > -- > You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups Nighthawk Motorcycle Lovers!" group. > To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. > To unsubscribe from this group, send email to > [email protected]. > For more options, visit this group > athttp://groups.google.com/group/nighthawk_lovers?hl=en. -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups Nighthawk Motorcycle Lovers!" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit this group athttp://groups.google.com/group/nighthawk_lovers?hl=en. -- ou received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups Nighthawk Motorcycle Lovers!" group. o post to this group, send email to [email protected]. o unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. or more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/nighthawk_lovers?hl=en. -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Nighthawk Motorcycle Lovers!" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/nighthawk_lovers?hl=en.
