MonoRT
MonoRT
The bike: A 1985 R80RT with an over-5 year old Westco sealed battery, a Motorrad Elektrik diode board (same indeterminate age as the battery) and the Motorrad Elektrik ÔÇ£higher voltageÔÇØ regulator that is supposed to let the voltage peak at 14.2 volts.
The symptoms: at rest, the battery reads 12.77 volts. Flick the headlight on for 30 seconds and turn it off, still 12.77 volts. Bike starts and runs just fine (so far). GEN light comes on when ignition is switched on and it comes on at somewhere under 1,500 RPMs when the bike is running. Over 1,500 RPM, no GEN light.
As I got close to home after work, I noticed that the notoriously inaccurate Motometer relative voltage meter was indicating quite a bit lower than it normally does at freeway speeds. I got home, parked the bike and checked the battery at rest (12.7 volts) and then started the bike and locked the throttle at 4K RPM. Voltage across the battery terminals was 12.8 and it did not seem to vary much with RPM changes ÔÇô not so good. I noticed a lot of white powder built up on the negative battery terminal and connectors.
I disconnected the ground wires at the battery and cleaned off all of the white deposits. I also cleaned the main ground connection at the transmission breather. While the ground was disconnected, I pulled off the front cover and checked the brushes to be sure they had plenty of travel and made good contact with the rotor rings. I pulled up the brushes and checked for continuity across the slip rings. That was good. I checked all of the connections between the diode board and alternator (most of this is new compared to the bike since these wires were replaced when the ME diode board went in) and everything ÔÇ£lookedÔÇØ OK. The diode board has two paths to ground via a cable and the cast-in mounts in the timing case ÔÇô again, these ÔÇ£lookÔÇØ good (I get continuity with the meter).
I wondered about all of that crud on the battery terminal and since I was running out of time, I put the bike back together, started it and checked the voltage at 4K RPM across the battery terminals. 13.8 ÔÇô not great, but not so bad either. The bike had cooled down by the time I did the final test.
This morning, riding to work, the relative voltage meter was back to its old, ÔÇ£normalÔÇØ position at freeway speeds ÔÇô until I was about a mile from work (a 19 mile ride). Then, the needle dropped down to the position that worried me in the first place. I had the meter with me, so I checked the at rest battery voltage after I parked - 12.76 volts. IÔÇÖm not sure that IÔÇÖll be welcome to lock the throttle at 4K right in front of the office, so I did not do that, but I suspect that I'd have gotten a low reading.
So What do I go after first? I know that old batteries can cause all sorts of weird symptoms. Old wires are often culprits. Seems like the alternator rotor and GEN light are OK. Since the voltage appeared to drop at the end of a ride (last night and this morning), could it be a goofy voltage regulator responding to engine heat?
The symptoms: at rest, the battery reads 12.77 volts. Flick the headlight on for 30 seconds and turn it off, still 12.77 volts. Bike starts and runs just fine (so far). GEN light comes on when ignition is switched on and it comes on at somewhere under 1,500 RPMs when the bike is running. Over 1,500 RPM, no GEN light.
As I got close to home after work, I noticed that the notoriously inaccurate Motometer relative voltage meter was indicating quite a bit lower than it normally does at freeway speeds. I got home, parked the bike and checked the battery at rest (12.7 volts) and then started the bike and locked the throttle at 4K RPM. Voltage across the battery terminals was 12.8 and it did not seem to vary much with RPM changes ÔÇô not so good. I noticed a lot of white powder built up on the negative battery terminal and connectors.
I disconnected the ground wires at the battery and cleaned off all of the white deposits. I also cleaned the main ground connection at the transmission breather. While the ground was disconnected, I pulled off the front cover and checked the brushes to be sure they had plenty of travel and made good contact with the rotor rings. I pulled up the brushes and checked for continuity across the slip rings. That was good. I checked all of the connections between the diode board and alternator (most of this is new compared to the bike since these wires were replaced when the ME diode board went in) and everything ÔÇ£lookedÔÇØ OK. The diode board has two paths to ground via a cable and the cast-in mounts in the timing case ÔÇô again, these ÔÇ£lookÔÇØ good (I get continuity with the meter).
I wondered about all of that crud on the battery terminal and since I was running out of time, I put the bike back together, started it and checked the voltage at 4K RPM across the battery terminals. 13.8 ÔÇô not great, but not so bad either. The bike had cooled down by the time I did the final test.
This morning, riding to work, the relative voltage meter was back to its old, ÔÇ£normalÔÇØ position at freeway speeds ÔÇô until I was about a mile from work (a 19 mile ride). Then, the needle dropped down to the position that worried me in the first place. I had the meter with me, so I checked the at rest battery voltage after I parked - 12.76 volts. IÔÇÖm not sure that IÔÇÖll be welcome to lock the throttle at 4K right in front of the office, so I did not do that, but I suspect that I'd have gotten a low reading.
So What do I go after first? I know that old batteries can cause all sorts of weird symptoms. Old wires are often culprits. Seems like the alternator rotor and GEN light are OK. Since the voltage appeared to drop at the end of a ride (last night and this morning), could it be a goofy voltage regulator responding to engine heat?