Author Topic: Access to battery terminals  (Read 8633 times)

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Arizoni

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Reply #15 on: May 12, 2019, 04:51:04 am
I guess every punch bowl will end up with a turd in it, sooner or later.

In this case, speaking as a registered forum "prima-donna", I say good riddance to Beardo.  Don't let the door hit you in the ass on your way out.
Jim
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mattsz

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Reply #16 on: May 12, 2019, 12:07:07 pm
I guess every punch bowl will end up with a turd in it, sooner or later.

In this case, speaking as a registered forum "prima-donna", I say good riddance to Beardo.  Don't let the door hit you in the ass on your way out.

We all have our moments.  He's mostly been polite and an interesting addition, I think.  No need for the fit, though, as he seems to have found this forum useful and friendly so far.  Oh well...


Arizoni

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Reply #17 on: May 12, 2019, 11:43:18 pm
Yah.  Your right mattsz.  I was having a rather bad day when I wrote that.

Maybe Beardo was having a bad day too?
Jim
2011 G5 Deluxe
1999 Miata 10th Anniversary


Javajap

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Reply #18 on: May 18, 2019, 01:59:26 am
Seeing it cranks and starts OK I would not suspect the alternator or its connections or the starter but it appears to be an intermittent fault and so would likely be as Peter said, a fusible link or some connection on the positive supply side of the system.

Both battery terminals and the cable clamps must be free of grey scale though. It it cranks ok at all times then that isnt the problem.


Bilgemaster

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Reply #19 on: May 18, 2019, 02:43:55 am
Yah.  Your right mattsz.  I was having a rather bad day when I wrote that.

Maybe Beardo was having a bad day too?

That was my hunch. Seemed a thoroughly OK sort otherwise, and I still hope to bump into him one of those rallies up in Oley one of these Junes.
So badass my Enfield's actually illegal  in India. Yet it squeaks by here in Virginia.

 


quebbeck

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Reply #20 on: May 24, 2020, 12:25:58 am
Hi!

Just in case someone stumbles over this thread and has the same problem...
I also had this newbie "not being able to ride my bike and now the battery is dead" issue and was struggling the entire day today to get the battery out. I found these two videos on YouTube which helped me a lot! The owner's manual unfortunately was not a big help.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mcm5Oz9idF4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=quDn0sxP73M


AK Mike

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Reply #21 on: May 24, 2020, 01:48:52 am
And knowing how to get to the battery, and get it out is apparently important for this particular bike as it seems to suck batteries dry for reasons unknown to me.  My Himmy is just a few months old and I have already gotten three batteries for it... the OEM and 2 new ones.


tooseevee

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Reply #22 on: May 24, 2020, 02:22:01 pm
     This is just an aside and really has nothing to do whatsoever with this thread's main reason for being or any of the participants who have participated in it (see what I did there? :)) or their representatives and I know it won't help anybody find or remove their HiMAHLyun's bat tree, but is it me or has everybody (anybody) (anyone) noticed that in all her travels, and I have watched them all, I don't recall her having any battery or starter problems. Both her first bike and her 2nd seem to just answer the call every damn time she hits that starter button. And it starts in one rev every time. If I had used the starter on my '08 AVL as she does, it would have become a fragment (spragment?) grenade years ago.

      Whatever all they've done with this HimaLAYan (BRILliant name), they certainly seem to have solved the electric starter/sprag thing that was an (a) horrendous clusterfuck on the AVLs. (Not to mention the "decompressor").

     Is it like airplane crashes?; we never hear about the ones that just land safely and according to Hoyle and everybody just gets off and gets on with it?.
« Last Edit: May 24, 2020, 02:26:11 pm by tooseevee »
RI USA '08 Black AVL Classic.9.8:1 ACEhead/manifold/canister. TM32/Open bottle/hot tube removed. Pertronix Coil. Fed mandates removed. Gr.TCI. Bobber seat. Battery in right side case. Decomp&all doodads removed. '30s Lucas taillight/7" visored headlight. Much blackout & wire/electrical upgrades.


Bilgemaster

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Reply #23 on: May 24, 2020, 04:42:20 pm
And knowing how to get to the battery, and get it out is apparently important for this particular bike as it seems to suck batteries dry for reasons unknown to me.  My Himmy is just a few months old and I have already gotten three batteries for it... the OEM and 2 new ones.

I'm not great with electrics, but three batteries in about as many months cannot be right. Something's gotta be drawing them down into the grave: maybe a "mild" short somewhere? Not enough to blow a fuse, but with sufficient draw to run down the battery? Could one of those newfangled electronic gizmos like that on-board compass be in some always-on state? I wouldn't have guessed there'd be enough draw from it, but maybe over a few weeks? Until that Gremlin's unmasked, maybe a battery tender, even one of those ultra-cheapo Harbor Freight ones (https://www.harborfreight.com/automotive/battery-tools-accessories/battery-chargers-maintainers/automatic-battery-float-charger-42292.html) or one of their little 1½ watt solar panels where no wall outlet's handy (https://www.harborfreight.com/15-watt-solar-battery-charger-62449.html) might do the trick. I use both products here and there, and have been well satisfied with them. It ain't Courtney Love's vibrator. Nobody should have to be replacing their battery every month.
« Last Edit: May 24, 2020, 04:46:40 pm by Bilgemaster »
So badass my Enfield's actually illegal  in India. Yet it squeaks by here in Virginia.

 


AK Mike

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Reply #24 on: May 24, 2020, 06:08:38 pm
I'm not great with electrics, but three batteries in about as many months cannot be right. Something's gotta be drawing them down into the grave: maybe a "mild" short somewhere? Not enough to blow a fuse, but with sufficient draw to run down the battery? Could one of those newfangled electronic gizmos like that on-board compass be in some always-on state? I wouldn't have guessed there'd be enough draw from it, but maybe over a few weeks? Until that Gremlin's unmasked, maybe a battery tender, even one of those ultra-cheapo Harbor Freight ones (https://www.harborfreight.com/automotive/battery-tools-accessories/battery-chargers-maintainers/automatic-battery-float-charger-42292.html) or one of their little 1½ watt solar panels where no wall outlet's handy (https://www.harborfreight.com/15-watt-solar-battery-charger-62449.html) might do the trick. I use both products here and there, and have been well satisfied with them. It ain't Courtney Love's vibrator. Nobody should have to be replacing their battery every month.
Thanks for the suggestions.  I am really stumped, but granted, I ain't no genius when it comes to electronics either.

I have checked what I can with my multimeter and if there is a parasitic drain, I'm not registering it.  Initially I assumed it was the crap OEM battery that everyone has issues with, so I just replaced it early.  But then when the second battery was also draining, I thought... OK, maybe I just got unlucky with that battery too.  So now I'm into my third battery and it's doing the same thing.  I also thought maybe the clock would cause a constant discharge.  Still, it shouldn't be anything that would deplete a battery in a week or 10 days.  I've never had any of my other 5 motorcycles behave like this.  Sure... I'll put them on a tender if I know it'll sit for a month or more (and I always put them on tenders over the winter months).  But to have to worry about a battery discharging in one or two weeks if not on a tender seems crazy.  And I park the bike in an area not near power, so always keeping it on a tender is not an option.  Guess that is just the way this bike is going to behave and if I want to keep it, I just have to accept that fact.


Bilgemaster

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Reply #25 on: May 24, 2020, 07:03:19 pm
[...Snip!] And I park the bike in an area not near power, so always keeping it on a tender is not an option.  Guess that is just the way this bike is going to behave and if I want to keep it, I just have to accept that fact.

Try one of those little solar panel chargers I linked to. For the past couple of years I've had one out in all weathers keeping my little Com-Pac 16 sailboat's house battery tip-top. It's got holes in either end if you needed to secure it with a smallish cable lock, hang it on a nail, or something. Harbor Freight also sells a Solar Power Connection Cable Kit for less than 10 bucks that includes a long (about 10 foot?) and handy sort of extension cord if needed (https://www.harborfreight.com/home-outdoor/home/solar/solar-power-connection-cable-kit-63981.html).
So badass my Enfield's actually illegal  in India. Yet it squeaks by here in Virginia.

 


AK Mike

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Reply #26 on: May 24, 2020, 09:50:05 pm
Try one of those little solar panel chargers I linked to. For the past couple of years I've had one out in all weathers keeping my little Com-Pac 16 sailboat's house battery tip-top. It's got holes in either end if you needed to secure it with a smallish cable lock, hang it on a nail, or something. Harbor Freight also sells a Solar Power Connection Cable Kit for less than 10 bucks that includes a long (about 10 foot?) and handy sort of extension cord if needed (https://www.harborfreight.com/home-outdoor/home/solar/solar-power-connection-cable-kit-63981.html).
Thank you for that.  I missed that link in your first message.  I'll definitely give it a try.  Looks like a good (temporary) solution.
Cheers.