not straight away.
the battery powers the bike. the alternator tops up the battery. it's a bit like the cold water tank in your loft getting topped up by the mains.
I know that
, Motobiker seems to have other ideas
not straight away.
the battery powers the bike. the alternator tops up the battery. it's a bit like the cold water tank in your loft getting topped up by the mains.
, Motobiker seems to have other ideas
I know that, Motobiker seems to have other ideas
![]()
So, reading the above, if the alternator belt breaks then the bike stops![]()

just because a battery won't turn a bike over doesn't mean it wouldn't run the bike for a length of time once started by other means IE jump start, the loading on a battery while turning the engine over is considerable (can peak in the hundreds of amps) and the load while running could be less than 10 amps
Bike had the alarm immobiliser taken off at the weekend (done professionally), could that have affected anything at all,

a flat battery is a flat battery.. in the bike if it IS flat... it simply becomes part of the circuit between the alternator and the bikes electrical system.
and I can assure you the battery in my bike was dead as a doornail.
jump start and the bike ran. stop the engine and the bike died a death.. lights slowly faded away. horn would barely squeek. the only thing that showed any life was the RID.
So the only conclusion I could draw from that.. was that the alternator was keeping the bike going.
Incorrect.![]()
It's not the battery that keeps a bike running - once started.![]()
oh.. I see.
you were being pedantic..
Was the bike perfect straight after removing the alarm/immobiliser?
You could disconnect the battery and leave the bike overnight, then see how the bike starts.....
