'68 dream loses charge quickly
Hi,
Rectifiers or diodes always "leak" current, but in normal situations this is very low, typical values are a few nanoamps. However, the current leaking in these old rectifiers can be a bit higher. In normal cases a rectifiers does work, or doesn't work. Another problem could be a leaking current in the wiring or somewhere else (ignition switch ?), but a bad battery is the most logical and suspected reason, just test the battery outside the bike on a loader, and check the voltage after the battery is fully loaded, and repeat this every day the same time. Jensen assembly of Japanese motorcycles requires great peace of mind (Pirsig)
Hi,
If the battery is ok, check with your meter the resistance seen from the battery leads (disconnect the battery first). The reading should be a very high resistance (mostly depending on the quality of the meter) when the switch is in the off position. But when it shows a few kilo ohm to 100 kilo ohms, check were the "short circuit" is with the meter. If you use a 9 ampere hour battery which is fully charged and it looses capacity, let's say 1 Ampere hours, over 10 days. It loses 1 ampere hours over 10 * 24 hours is 240 hours. That means that you (per hour) 1/240 = 0.0042 amp hour. Your system is 12 Volts, so start looking for something with a resistance of 12/0.0042= 2880 ohms (3 kilo ohms). The above is only an theoretical example (without the battery's internal losses, the 0.2 Volts in your case) , but it gives a rule of thumb of what to look for, Jensen assembly of Japanese motorcycles requires great peace of mind (Pirsig)
I had a similar problem to yours on my first CB, whereby it would run all week, daily use, with the lights ON (additional charging coils get 'added in' to support the current required by the lighting); it turned out to be a broken wire on the main stator coils. Re-soldered the yellow wire and all was well.
If it's the brown that's high-resistence / discontinuous, then you'll get no lift in voltage with the engine running, even with the lights ON (combo-switch 2nd detent c/w from OFF?); if it's the yellow, then chances are that's all the problem is -- just a bad connection at the stator, or even at the bunch of connections from the main harness to the motor (bn, y, pk: stator; l-gn/r: neutral switch).
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