Wiring basics, best practices, etc.
Posted: Thu Sep 25, 2014 12:43 am
CBXers,
I'd really appreciate it if maybe we could make this a rolling thread where we trade notes, techniques, products, specs, reference, etc for information on motorcycle electric projects. I am pushing myself to learn a lot more and be a lot better with this stuff recently, and I know I could really benefit from some coaching from you super-experienced guys.
I'll start with a gremlin I dealt with today: I recently replaced my wiring harness with one of the excellent repro harnesses that Phil Taber sells and that was an easy and satisfying project, and has given me impetus to tackle a few other electrical upgrades while I was at it. Tonight I was planning a ride-in to the local vintage gathering, and 5 miles from home, things started dying, One by one. First the voltmeter croaked. then (only) one of the turnsignal indicators. Then the neutral light. Paranoid I had done something to cause my wiring harness to erupt, I dropped anchor, turned around and headed for home. The bike ran fine.
I threw the bike back on the lift, took off the side cover and rechecked all the work I had done. Everything looked fine. No evidence of too much heat, nada. I did take the opportunity to install some Hitachi connectors in place of some bullet connectors, but found no problems there, and also re-tapped the power for the coil relay directly from the battery on a fused lead as my friend Tony Herd has suggested I do. No change. So I started inventorying the connectors under the ignition and gauges and VOILA! the culprit. The connector into the tachometer was slid loose, and was making poor or intermittent contact. I plugged it in, flipped the ignition switch on, and everything lit up. Yay me.
But testing the connection, it was clear that it wasn't latching. The connector captive in the tach was slightly pooched and misshapen, and the little bale that catches the fang on the wiring harness connector was stretched out just enough that it would not stay latched. Drive on down the road and good old gravity would start bobbing that stub of wiring harness up and down and out it would come, again.
This was my MacGyver'ed solution: I took a 1/2" length of a bit of a wire tie, slipped it under the fang to act as a spring, and reinserted it into the tach. *CLICK*.
Here's an example of what I did (old crusty wiring harness).
Will let you know how it works out, but it seems pretty positive now and the bit of wiretie is pretty snug in there.
Anyone got a variation on this theme?
N.
I'd really appreciate it if maybe we could make this a rolling thread where we trade notes, techniques, products, specs, reference, etc for information on motorcycle electric projects. I am pushing myself to learn a lot more and be a lot better with this stuff recently, and I know I could really benefit from some coaching from you super-experienced guys.
I'll start with a gremlin I dealt with today: I recently replaced my wiring harness with one of the excellent repro harnesses that Phil Taber sells and that was an easy and satisfying project, and has given me impetus to tackle a few other electrical upgrades while I was at it. Tonight I was planning a ride-in to the local vintage gathering, and 5 miles from home, things started dying, One by one. First the voltmeter croaked. then (only) one of the turnsignal indicators. Then the neutral light. Paranoid I had done something to cause my wiring harness to erupt, I dropped anchor, turned around and headed for home. The bike ran fine.
I threw the bike back on the lift, took off the side cover and rechecked all the work I had done. Everything looked fine. No evidence of too much heat, nada. I did take the opportunity to install some Hitachi connectors in place of some bullet connectors, but found no problems there, and also re-tapped the power for the coil relay directly from the battery on a fused lead as my friend Tony Herd has suggested I do. No change. So I started inventorying the connectors under the ignition and gauges and VOILA! the culprit. The connector into the tachometer was slid loose, and was making poor or intermittent contact. I plugged it in, flipped the ignition switch on, and everything lit up. Yay me.
But testing the connection, it was clear that it wasn't latching. The connector captive in the tach was slightly pooched and misshapen, and the little bale that catches the fang on the wiring harness connector was stretched out just enough that it would not stay latched. Drive on down the road and good old gravity would start bobbing that stub of wiring harness up and down and out it would come, again.
This was my MacGyver'ed solution: I took a 1/2" length of a bit of a wire tie, slipped it under the fang to act as a spring, and reinserted it into the tach. *CLICK*.
Here's an example of what I did (old crusty wiring harness).
Will let you know how it works out, but it seems pretty positive now and the bit of wiretie is pretty snug in there.
Anyone got a variation on this theme?
N.