muppix
Registered user
Long story short: I'm off to the Alps soon, think my alternator may be buggered, would appreciate some advice.
What's happened was ...
I just don't get out as much on the GS as I'd like. Apart from a dreadful ride into work last week, 30 miles each way in rush hour traffic, it's spent most of it's time locked in the shed, occasionally sharing an Optimate with the DR-Z and no doubt dreaming of happier times. Prior to the work run she'd not been used or charged for a couple of months, and I was quite surprised when the engine turned over eagerly.
That was last week. This morning I got her out for a quick blat up the road to take the piss out of ... err ... "visit" a friend with seven stitches in his foot after stepping on a craft knife in his lounge. Engine turned over and started first time, just like always. Five miles up the road I stop for fuel, and again she starts on the button, keen as mustard. Another five miles to the caff, I swing by for some croissants on the basis that I've not had breakfast yet and he's not one for flowers.
Come out, put key in ignition, and straight away something doesn't look right - the 'check' flickers on the LCD, which then goes dead. And comes back on, goes dead, comes on, stabilises. I press the button but only get a click from the solenoid, which sets the screen off again. Cue 5 minutes of animated sweltering and swearing, much to the amusement of those sat at tables right where I've parked. While I'm waiting for the nice man from Carole Nash recovery to arrive I try the key several times more (well, you have to, right?) only to get the same predictable result: no fuel pump priming, no engine starting. Sometimes the solenoid clicks, sometimes it doesn't. Sometimes I can use the horn and flash the high beam, both of which look / sound fine, sometimes I can't. At one point I see 'EWS' on the display and start to fear the wurst, but I've had that ring antenna recall so maybe it's the electronics that are fecked?
When the AA patrol man arrives in his van he reckons it's the battery, apparently this weather kills them. News to me, I thought it was the cold, but I'm not about to argue. He gets out his starter battery and the jump-leads, hooks her up, and she turns over first time. Phew - so it's not the electronics. We disconnect the jump-leads, and within a couple of seconds the engine dies again. This surprises both of us, but I think he's not trying to show it, so we repeat the procedure with the same results.
Time for the multi tester. Before starting the battery reads 12.5V (connected to bike), dropping to a measly 6V once the ignition is on. Once we start her (with the external battery, which is then disconnected) she reads between 12V and 14V depending on revs, but drops to 0V every couple of seconds in a reliable rhythm before dying altogether. This worries me, because I always thought that the alternator makes enough juice to keep a bike running, even if the battery is shot and won't hold a charge. Mr. AA thinks otherwise, and gives me a lift to the bike shop so I can buy a new battery which he then fits for me. Naturally it starts first time, and shows between 14V and 16V with the engine running. No more intermittent dropping to 0V, business as usual. I ride 10 miles home and put her on the Optimate, he takes the old battery away for recycling.
So, battery or alternator?
I really, really want it to be a duff battery. In the 6 years I've owned the bike from new she's refused to start only once, when I left it too long between rides and the weather was unusually cold. Now that it's happened again I've started post-rationalising and it's not looking good, given my limited knowledge / experience:
Case for a duff battery (pretty weak, IMHO)
Case for a duff alternator
So, is there anything I can do (apart from ride her until she dies) that will settle the battery / alternator argument? My next chance for anything longer than a half-day outing is a ride to the French Alps at the start of September, and I'm not loving the prospect of something screwing that trip.
Any advice gratefully received!
Mup
What's happened was ...
I just don't get out as much on the GS as I'd like. Apart from a dreadful ride into work last week, 30 miles each way in rush hour traffic, it's spent most of it's time locked in the shed, occasionally sharing an Optimate with the DR-Z and no doubt dreaming of happier times. Prior to the work run she'd not been used or charged for a couple of months, and I was quite surprised when the engine turned over eagerly.
That was last week. This morning I got her out for a quick blat up the road to take the piss out of ... err ... "visit" a friend with seven stitches in his foot after stepping on a craft knife in his lounge. Engine turned over and started first time, just like always. Five miles up the road I stop for fuel, and again she starts on the button, keen as mustard. Another five miles to the caff, I swing by for some croissants on the basis that I've not had breakfast yet and he's not one for flowers.
Come out, put key in ignition, and straight away something doesn't look right - the 'check' flickers on the LCD, which then goes dead. And comes back on, goes dead, comes on, stabilises. I press the button but only get a click from the solenoid, which sets the screen off again. Cue 5 minutes of animated sweltering and swearing, much to the amusement of those sat at tables right where I've parked. While I'm waiting for the nice man from Carole Nash recovery to arrive I try the key several times more (well, you have to, right?) only to get the same predictable result: no fuel pump priming, no engine starting. Sometimes the solenoid clicks, sometimes it doesn't. Sometimes I can use the horn and flash the high beam, both of which look / sound fine, sometimes I can't. At one point I see 'EWS' on the display and start to fear the wurst, but I've had that ring antenna recall so maybe it's the electronics that are fecked?
When the AA patrol man arrives in his van he reckons it's the battery, apparently this weather kills them. News to me, I thought it was the cold, but I'm not about to argue. He gets out his starter battery and the jump-leads, hooks her up, and she turns over first time. Phew - so it's not the electronics. We disconnect the jump-leads, and within a couple of seconds the engine dies again. This surprises both of us, but I think he's not trying to show it, so we repeat the procedure with the same results.
Time for the multi tester. Before starting the battery reads 12.5V (connected to bike), dropping to a measly 6V once the ignition is on. Once we start her (with the external battery, which is then disconnected) she reads between 12V and 14V depending on revs, but drops to 0V every couple of seconds in a reliable rhythm before dying altogether. This worries me, because I always thought that the alternator makes enough juice to keep a bike running, even if the battery is shot and won't hold a charge. Mr. AA thinks otherwise, and gives me a lift to the bike shop so I can buy a new battery which he then fits for me. Naturally it starts first time, and shows between 14V and 16V with the engine running. No more intermittent dropping to 0V, business as usual. I ride 10 miles home and put her on the Optimate, he takes the old battery away for recycling.
So, battery or alternator?
I really, really want it to be a duff battery. In the 6 years I've owned the bike from new she's refused to start only once, when I left it too long between rides and the weather was unusually cold. Now that it's happened again I've started post-rationalising and it's not looking good, given my limited knowledge / experience:
Case for a duff battery (pretty weak, IMHO)
- Bike works again when it was replaced
- It's had one battery from new, nearly 6 years old
Case for a duff alternator
- Bike started fine this morning, despite having stood for a while
- Started again after just five miles - easily possible with a healthy battery that's not being charged - but refused to start a third time shortly afterward
- Bike started when an auxiliary battery was called into play, but died as soon as that was removed. Again, I thought that once started it should run and run, regardless of whether a battery is even connected
So, is there anything I can do (apart from ride her until she dies) that will settle the battery / alternator argument? My next chance for anything longer than a half-day outing is a ride to the French Alps at the start of September, and I'm not loving the prospect of something screwing that trip.
Any advice gratefully received!
Mup
