partial goodbye klr hello vstrom
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- Posts: 230
- Joined: Mon Nov 13, 2006 7:29 am
electrical help
While riding a new-to-me KLR last week I encountered some electrical
problems. The lights went out, the tach stopped working and my heated
vest stopped heating. The bike still ran, but no juice. At the coffee
stop folks commented on my lights being out, and when I tried to start
the bike there was no reaction when I turned the key (no dash lights,
etc) or pushed the start button. We were able to bump start the bike
and I headed home.
At home, I checked the fuses and battery. The fuses looked good and a
check with a circuit tester showed they were ok. The battery was warm
to the touch, and some of the cells were very low on fluid. I'm not
sure if this is a cause of the problems or a symptom?
I replaced the battery with a known good battery, but it hasn't
helped. Still no dash lights when I turn the key, no horn, no starter,
etc. I replaced the fuses but that didn't help either. (I've also
ordered a blade fuse conversion kit to replace the glass fuses).
I've got 12.7 volts at the battery. I've got 12.7 volts where the
white wire plugs into the ignition switch. When I put a circuit
tester to the white and brown wires at the ignition switch the circuit
testing light goes on and off when I turn the key on and off; none of
the other wires complete a circuit with the white wire However, with
the key on I don't have any voltage at the brown wire or blue/white
wire at the 10-amp fuse - I expected to see 12.7 volts here.
Is there any reason at this point to bump starting the bike to check
the charging system? I'm thinking the best course is to solve the
problem of why there isn't any juice to the lights starter, etc.
first.
I'm muddling along here folks. Anyone have any suggestions? Oh, can
anyone point me to the locations where the wiring harness is grounded
to the fram so I can check and clean the ground?
--
Kevin Powers
White Bear Lake, MN
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- Posts: 71
- Joined: Sun Aug 06, 2006 10:31 am
electrical help
I'm no electrical genius by any means, but I did have the same
problem you're having on a skid-steer loader. I finally traced it
to a bad connection in a splicing block, where a bunch of wires came
together and could be split for easier servicing. I unplugged the
two halves, plugged it back together and everything worked. My KLR
is new, so I'm not tha familiar with the electrical system yet, but
I would look for something similar near the ignition switch. If
nothing is working I'd bet it's either that, or a bad ground
second. Let us know what you find.
Ross
Fertile, MN
--- In DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com, "Kevin Powers"
wrote:
electrical> > While riding a new-to-me KLR last week I encountered some
heated> problems. The lights went out, the tach stopped working and my
coffee> vest stopped heating. The bike still ran, but no juice. At the
start> stop folks commented on my lights being out, and when I tried to
lights,> the bike there was no reaction when I turned the key (no dash
bike> etc) or pushed the start button. We were able to bump start the
and a> and I headed home. > > At home, I checked the fuses and battery. The fuses looked good
warm> check with a circuit tester showed they were ok. The battery was
starter,> to the touch, and some of the cells were very low on fluid. I'm not > sure if this is a cause of the problems or a symptom? > > I replaced the battery with a known good battery, but it hasn't > helped. Still no dash lights when I turn the key, no horn, no
circuit> etc. I replaced the fuses but that didn't help either. (I've also > ordered a blade fuse conversion kit to replace the glass fuses). > > I've got 12.7 volts at the battery. I've got 12.7 volts where the > white wire plugs into the ignition switch. When I put a circuit > tester to the white and brown wires at the ignition switch the
of> testing light goes on and off when I turn the key on and off; none
with> the other wires complete a circuit with the white wire However,
check> the key on I don't have any voltage at the brown wire or blue/white > wire at the 10-amp fuse - I expected to see 12.7 volts here. > > Is there any reason at this point to bump starting the bike to
can> the charging system? I'm thinking the best course is to solve the > problem of why there isn't any juice to the lights starter, etc. > first. > > I'm muddling along here folks. Anyone have any suggestions? Oh,
grounded> anyone point me to the locations where the wiring harness is
> to the fram so I can check and clean the ground? > -- > Kevin Powers > White Bear Lake, MN >
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- Posts: 280
- Joined: Sun Mar 13, 2005 2:54 pm
electrical help
Kevin--
Not sure how much help I can offer, but let me try.
It sounds like you may not have a Clymer manual yet.
If not, I'd strongly suggest getting one:
p.205 Walks you through testing the ignition switch
"1. Separate the plug (duh... they're of course
talking about the plug in front of the speedo)
2. Connet an ohmeter to the black/yellow wire and the
black/white wire. When the ignition switch is in the
lock, off, or park position there should be
continuity.
3. Connect the ohmeter to the white wire and the
brown wire. When the ignition switch is in the on
position there should be continuity.
4. Connect the ohmeter to the red wire and the
red/white wire. This is the light circuit. If
necessary, refer to the wiring diagram at the back of
the manual. When the ignition swithc is in the on
position there should be continuity.
5. Replace or repair the assembly if it fails any of
the checks"
Also, you can find a full color wiring diagram,
including a blow-up of how the ignition switch works,
here:
http://www.bigcee.com/faq/KLR650-color-wiring-diagram.jpg
I don't think the charging system is the culprit... if
you put a known good battery in, for the purposes of
trouble shooting the charging system is irrelevant.
Also, I don't thinkmost of the KLR electrical system
uses the frame as an active ground. It works (I've
grounded accessories to the frame) but if you look on
the bike I believe most if not all of the lights
ground through the black/yellow wire... the starter
frame grounds maybe? But it wouldn't affect your
problems here I don't think.
I suggest getting a cup of coffee, the
ohmeter/testlight, and the wiring diagram and getting
comfy. You basically need to just plod along the
path the juice runs confirming it's there until you
find the place it's NOT there. Maybe someone else has
a more enlightened suggestion, but it sounds to me
like that's where you're at.
Good luck.
-Luke
--- Kevin Powers wrote:
____________________________________________________________________________________ Sponsored Link Don't quit your job - take classes online www.Classesusa.com> While riding a new-to-me KLR last week I encountered > some electrical > problems. The lights went out, the tach stopped > working and my heated > vest stopped heating. The bike still ran, but no > juice. At the coffee > stop folks commented on my lights being out, and > when I tried to start > the bike there was no reaction when I turned the key > (no dash lights, > etc) or pushed the start button. We were able to > bump start the bike > and I headed home. > > At home, I checked the fuses and battery. The fuses > looked good and a > check with a circuit tester showed they were ok. The > battery was warm > to the touch, and some of the cells were very low on > fluid. I'm not > sure if this is a cause of the problems or a > symptom? > > I replaced the battery with a known good battery, > but it hasn't > helped. Still no dash lights when I turn the key, no > horn, no starter, > etc. I replaced the fuses but that didn't help > either. (I've also > ordered a blade fuse conversion kit to replace the > glass fuses). > > I've got 12.7 volts at the battery. I've got 12.7 > volts where the > white wire plugs into the ignition switch. When I > put a circuit > tester to the white and brown wires at the ignition > switch the circuit > testing light goes on and off when I turn the key on > and off; none of > the other wires complete a circuit with the white > wire However, with > the key on I don't have any voltage at the brown > wire or blue/white > wire at the 10-amp fuse - I expected to see 12.7 > volts here. > > Is there any reason at this point to bump starting > the bike to check > the charging system? I'm thinking the best course > is to solve the > problem of why there isn't any juice to the lights > starter, etc. > first. > > I'm muddling along here folks. Anyone have any > suggestions? Oh, can > anyone point me to the locations where the wiring > harness is grounded > to the fram so I can check and clean the ground? > -- > Kevin Powers > White Bear Lake, MN >
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- Posts: 3
- Joined: Thu Mar 08, 2007 10:58 pm
electrical help
Well, I just made a bone-head mistake that has killed my headlight
and instrument cluster illumination lamps. I'm hoping someone can
point me to the fuse I burned out (and I'm hoping that's all it is.)
I had wired up a Powerlet socket to the 2 existing but otherwise
unused running light connectors up in the fairing. While testing the
result with a voltmeter I was surprised to see only 10.2V. To double-
check I attempted to test again but I must have shorted out the +/-
contacts in the socket because suddenly my headlight died and the
voltmeter was reading 0. (I'm pretty sure I heard a pop, but not
100%)
Anyway, upon further testing of the rest of the electrical
components:
- The headlight is dead
- The running light connectors are dead
- The lamps to illuminate the instrument cluster are dead
- The turn signals work fine
- The horn works
- The brake light works
- The starter works
- Haven't tested the fan
So, I'm hoping this is just a burned out fuse but I'll be damned if
I can find it - and the wiring diagram in my Clymer manual doesn't
seem to indicate a fuse that would take out only the things I've
described above. (I'm not an electrician though, so it's perfectly
likely that I'm just not reading it correctly.)
There is one very small fuse in a white inline fuse holder on the
left side of the fairing - where all of the other electrical
connectors meet - but it tested OK (.6 ohms or so)
Just to make things interesting, I upgraded to the Left Hand
Plug&Play switch - not sure if that would introduce some new fuse
somewhere...
Does anyone have a hint of where I should be looking? Might I have
possibly done something more damaging than just burned out a fuse?
This is a total long shot, but what the heck. I'm supposed to ride
out Saturday morning for a 2-day trip so I'm likely going to have to
rush the bike into a dealer tomorrow - but if it turns out someone
can point me in the right direction it would save me the trip/time.
Thanks,
Slade
(The guy who should NEVER play with electricity ...)
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- Posts: 72
- Joined: Wed Apr 11, 2007 8:18 am
electrical help
Sounds like the 10 amp fuse which is located in the fuse holder under the seat..
albatross
who gets a tingle playing with electrons
----- Original Message ----- From: slademitchell To: DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com Sent: Friday, June 15, 2007 1:23 AM Subject: [DSN_KLR650] Electrical help Well, I just made a bone-head mistake that has killed my headlight and instrument cluster illumination lamps. I'm hoping someone can point me to the fuse I burned out (and I'm hoping that's all it is.) I had wired up a Powerlet socket to the 2 existing but otherwise unused running light connectors up in the fairing. While testing the result with a voltmeter I was surprised to see only 10.2V. To double- check I attempted to test again but I must have shorted out the +/- contacts in the socket because suddenly my headlight died and the voltmeter was reading 0. (I'm pretty sure I heard a pop, but not 100%) Anyway, upon further testing of the rest of the electrical components: - The headlight is dead - The running light connectors are dead - The lamps to illuminate the instrument cluster are dead - The turn signals work fine - The horn works - The brake light works - The starter works - Haven't tested the fan So, I'm hoping this is just a burned out fuse but I'll be damned if I can find it - and the wiring diagram in my Clymer manual doesn't seem to indicate a fuse that would take out only the things I've described above. (I'm not an electrician though, so it's perfectly likely that I'm just not reading it correctly.) There is one very small fuse in a white inline fuse holder on the left side of the fairing - where all of the other electrical connectors meet - but it tested OK (.6 ohms or so) Just to make things interesting, I upgraded to the Left Hand Plug&Play switch - not sure if that would introduce some new fuse somewhere... Does anyone have a hint of where I should be looking? Might I have possibly done something more damaging than just burned out a fuse? This is a total long shot, but what the heck. I'm supposed to ride out Saturday morning for a 2-day trip so I'm likely going to have to rush the bike into a dealer tomorrow - but if it turns out someone can point me in the right direction it would save me the trip/time. Thanks, Slade (The guy who should NEVER play with electricity ...) [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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electrical help
On Fri, 15 Jun 2007 05:23:08 -0000 "slademitchell"
writes:
SNIP> Well, I just made a bone-head mistake that has killed my headlight > and instrument cluster illumination lamps. I'm hoping someone can > point me to the fuse I burned out (and I'm hoping that's all it > is.)
SNIP> Does anyone have a hint of where I should be looking? Might I have > possibly done something more damaging than just burned out a fuse?
<><><><><> <><><><><> Slade, I'm with Albatross, I'm betting on the 10 amp fuse under the seat on top of the battery if your fuses are still stock. Best, Jeff Saline ABC # 4412 South Dakota Airmarshal Airheads Beemer Club www.airheads.org The Beautiful Black Hills of South Dakota 75 R90/6, 03 KLR650, 79 R100RT> Thanks, > > Slade > (The guy who should NEVER play with electricity ...)
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- Joined: Thu Apr 01, 2004 7:48 am
electrical help
The headlight fuse handles the headlight. The headlight fuse received power from the Brown wire leading from the ignition switch. If this fuse blows you will have no headlight. The ignition switch receives power through the white wire from the Main fuse. If the Main fuse blows you will have no power.
I'm late for work now so can't do more.I'll try to remember to review your post but email directly if you need help.
Norm
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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- Joined: Thu Mar 08, 2007 10:58 pm
electrical help
The Albatross Wins!
I'm not sure whether I'm more happy that it's a simple fix or wish it
was something more complicated so I don't look like such an idiot -
but whatever, I'm used to the idiot thing.
Thanks Jeff, you were of course correct. And my weekend ride is back
on (after a quick trip to Schucks for a handful of new 10A fuses...)
Slade
(Properly humbled)
--- In DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com, Jeff Saline wrote: > I'm with Albatross, I'm betting on the 10 amp fuse under the seat on top > of the battery if your fuses are still stock. > > Best, > > Jeff Saline > ABC # 4412 South Dakota Airmarshal > Airheads Beemer Club www.airheads.org > The Beautiful Black Hills of South Dakota > 75 R90/6, 03 KLR650, 79 R100RT >
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electrical help
--- In DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com, "slademitchell" wrote:
Slade, Properly humbled? thats nonsense. Properly informed, properly educated, and properly befriended. smile. Good list, good friends, and you learn something also. Now: Go change the gas and tells us pogues (=working stiffs)how much fun you had on your trip this weekend. revmaaatin. ps; if you take rain gear, 'remember' you packed it. ask me how I know....> > The Albatross Wins! > > I'm not sure whether I'm more happy that it's a simple fix or wish it > was something more complicated so I don't look like such an idiot - > but whatever, I'm used to the idiot thing. > > Thanks Jeff, you were of course correct. And my weekend ride is back > on (after a quick trip to Schucks for a handful of new 10A fuses...) > > > Slade > (Properly humbled)
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electrical help
Should have got 15A fuses. Thanks CA Stu> -----Original Message----- > > Thanks Jeff, you were of course correct. And my weekend ride is back > on (after a quick trip to Schucks for a handful of new 10A fuses...) > > > Slade > (Properly humbled) >
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