thanks MC ... I will look into this next year I guess ... battery is dead. I tried jumping it with the wife's bike and it would stay running until I disconnected the jumper cables.
Quote from: dreadly on Nov 06, 2012, 10:24:02 AMthanks MC ... I will look into this next year I guess ... battery is dead. I tried jumping it with the wife's bike and it would stay running until I disconnected the jumper cables.Not a good sign.Do you have a voltmeter?If you do,use the wife's bike's battery to start your Raider and measure the voltage between the positive and negative terminals.If you don't have at least 13.5V then you have a charging system problem.I know the manual says 14.2-14.8V but that's the "no load regulated voltage".Everything electrical is a load.To get an accurate reading you need a good battery with a good charge,so don't just jumper on to it.Either replace the battery completely,or disconnect both cables and jumper from the good battery to the cables.And if your wife's battery is still in her bike,keep the ignition off.And by the way,you should avoid disconnecting the battery when the engine is running,or anytime the ignition is on.The sudden change in voltage creates a spike,or power surge,that can damage the ECU's tiny circuits and cause premature failure.The same advice applies to cars.
Quote from: theurbanlegend on Nov 06, 2012, 07:06:45 PMQuote from: dreadly on Nov 06, 2012, 10:24:02 AMthanks MC ... I will look into this next year I guess ... battery is dead. I tried jumping it with the wife's bike and it would stay running until I disconnected the jumper cables.Not a good sign.Do you have a voltmeter?If you do,use the wife's bike's battery to start your Raider and measure the voltage between the positive and negative terminals.If you don't have at least 13.5V then you have a charging system problem.I know the manual says 14.2-14.8V but that's the "no load regulated voltage".Everything electrical is a load.To get an accurate reading you need a good battery with a good charge,so don't just jumper on to it.Either replace the battery completely,or disconnect both cables and jumper from the good battery to the cables.And if your wife's battery is still in her bike,keep the ignition off.And by the way,you should avoid disconnecting the battery when the engine is running,or anytime the ignition is on.The sudden change in voltage creates a spike,or power surge,that can damage the ECU's tiny circuits and cause premature failure.The same advice applies to cars.ether the battery is bad, or rectifier/regulator is toast or the stator is fried. one of these three. if i were there i could find the problem for you in minutes.
Quote from: theurbanlegend on Nov 06, 2012, 07:06:45 PMQuote from: dreadly on Nov 06, 2012, 10:24:02 AMthanks MC ... I will look into this next year I guess ... battery is dead. I tried jumping it with the wife's bike and it would stay running until I disconnected the jumper cables.Not a good sign.Do you have a voltmeter?If you do,use the wife's bike's battery to start your Raider and measure the voltage between the positive and negative terminals.If you don't have at least 13.5V then you have a charging system problem.I know the manual says 14.2-14.8V but that's the "no load regulated voltage".Everything electrical is a load.To get an accurate reading you need a good battery with a good charge,so don't just jumper on to it.Either replace the battery completely,or disconnect both cables and jumper from the good battery to the cables.And if your wife's battery is still in her bike,keep the ignition off.And by the way,you should avoid disconnecting the battery when the engine is running,or anytime the ignition is on.The sudden change in voltage creates a spike,or power surge,that can damage the ECU's tiny circuits and cause premature failure.The same advice applies to cars.Would the reading be valid since it's using the other battery for juice?