bike died need some opinions
#1
bike died need some opinions
okay going to make this story short. bike died at stoplight, checked fuses, replaced blown fan fuse, check battery, it was drained, got a jump.
drove 2 miles, bike died again, checked fuses, all were fine, battery dead again, suspect radiator fan, unplug fan, get a jump, drive 13 miles, bike dies again.
im only 4 miles from home, plug fan back in since im close, get a jump, make it home, let bike idle to look at fan to see if tis spinning, its not spinning but as i look away i hear a click and look back and its spinning, bike slowly dies.
ok the fan is clearly draining the battery but is it the fans fault or the batteries fault? even with the fan unplugged the bike still died, although it lasted longer. the battery is an interstate battery thats only a little over a year old, it "should" be fine.
i got the battery on the slow charger right now but i want to know if their is a way to check the fan electrically, as in see if its drawing too much power or something? and a way to check the alternator
anyhelp is appreciated.
drove 2 miles, bike died again, checked fuses, all were fine, battery dead again, suspect radiator fan, unplug fan, get a jump, drive 13 miles, bike dies again.
im only 4 miles from home, plug fan back in since im close, get a jump, make it home, let bike idle to look at fan to see if tis spinning, its not spinning but as i look away i hear a click and look back and its spinning, bike slowly dies.
ok the fan is clearly draining the battery but is it the fans fault or the batteries fault? even with the fan unplugged the bike still died, although it lasted longer. the battery is an interstate battery thats only a little over a year old, it "should" be fine.
i got the battery on the slow charger right now but i want to know if their is a way to check the fan electrically, as in see if its drawing too much power or something? and a way to check the alternator
anyhelp is appreciated.
#2
No help guys? I know your all better than that!
I charged the battery up and I drove for an hour and ten minutes and it seemed fine but when I got home and shut it off it would not come back on, battery was dead again.
Gonna see if I have a warranty on my interstate batty and try to get a new one, see what happens .
I charged the battery up and I drove for an hour and ten minutes and it seemed fine but when I got home and shut it off it would not come back on, battery was dead again.
Gonna see if I have a warranty on my interstate batty and try to get a new one, see what happens .
#3
probably not the battery should just take the battery in to advanced auto or someplace like that and have it tested its free, but it is probable either the stator or the rectifier get a voltage gage and unplug the clip and see if the rectifier is getting enough juice, have to check a service manual to see what the proper voltage is for coming out of the rectifier and coming out of the stator, the stator voltage will change as the bike revs higher it will pump out more power the bike will run without them for a little while as long as the battery is charged
#4
probably not the battery should just take the battery in to advanced auto or someplace like that and have it tested its free, but it is probable either the stator or the rectifier get a voltage gage and unplug the clip and see if the rectifier is getting enough juice, have to check a service manual to see what the proper voltage is for coming out of the rectifier and coming out of the stator, the stator voltage will change as the bike revs higher it will pump out more power the bike will run without them for a little while as long as the battery is charged
#5
#6
Check the manual for your bike (not sure what you have). Most Stators can be checked with just a meter, and it's done right from the connector that plugs into the R/R. The Stator is basically 3 coils of wire, so you're just checking the resistance through each of the coils, and to make sure none of them are shorted out to ground.
#7
#8
hey man its not so bad. i felt the same way two weeks ago.
you should really check the stator. after my r/r went out, it fried my stator cause it was throwing current back to it or something. i went the cheap road and bought just the rectifier, and it blew up in 10 mins. it checked out ok, then i went for a 10=15 min ride, came home and checked, it was broke.12.0 at battery, bike running etc..
so i replaced the stator with one from electrosport $160 shipped to my house in 2 days. 1 year warrenty on it so if it breaks again you get another for free.
then i bought another oem replacement r/r with big fins, $65 shipped in three days. total cost is about $220
much cheaper then going to honda, they wanted $400 something just for the stator!
you should really check the stator. after my r/r went out, it fried my stator cause it was throwing current back to it or something. i went the cheap road and bought just the rectifier, and it blew up in 10 mins. it checked out ok, then i went for a 10=15 min ride, came home and checked, it was broke.12.0 at battery, bike running etc..
so i replaced the stator with one from electrosport $160 shipped to my house in 2 days. 1 year warrenty on it so if it breaks again you get another for free.
then i bought another oem replacement r/r with big fins, $65 shipped in three days. total cost is about $220
much cheaper then going to honda, they wanted $400 something just for the stator!
#10