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Electrical Question for Honda CB Headlight Resistor

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caferacer
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Joined: 11 Aug 2012
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PostPosted: 16:42 - 07 May 2014    Post subject: Electrical Question for Honda CB Headlight Resistor Reply with quote

Awhhhh... badgers nadgers...

Bike: Honda CB 125 RS
Age: 1984
Problem: Ceramic Resistor for Headlight Circuit Broken
Mission: Replace Ceramic Resistor

Background
The ceramic resistor on my 125 has given up the ghost. It looks like the ceramics cracked a long time ago and the resistor wire inside has rusted through and broken.

Info
The electrics on the bike are 12 volt and from what I can tell the resistors are included in the circuit between the headlight and earth to protect the headlight from surges in power as it's directly powered by the stator.

First Attempt
The wiring diagram says I need 6.7 Ohms so I bought two 3.3 Ohm 10 Watt resistors from Maplin and put them in series to produce 6.6 Ohms at 20 Watts.

https://www.maplin.co.uk/p/wirewound-10-watt-33-ohm-resistor-h3r3

When I turned the engine on they immediately got hot and started smoking.

Something more substantial required?
So I assume the wattage is a lot higher than 20 Watts even at idle speed and as maplin don't have 7no 1 Ohm 10 Watt resistors in stock I started looking at 100W ones from RS Components.

https://uk.rs-online.com/web/p/panel-mount-fixed-resistors/0188116/

Not sure how I'd draw the heat away from this though.

Honda CG Resistors
Having noticed that there are plenty of CG headlight resistors on ebay which could be quite similar to my CB headlight resistor I started looking at CG wiring diagrams. Looks like they are 10 Ohm 20 Watt resistors. So why am I having this issue with wattage?

https://www.cmsnl.com/honda-cg125-1993-singapore_model2607/resistor-comp_35400kcs651/#whereused

Please help
Has anyone successfully replaced these resistors?
Am I going about this in the right way?
Has anyone seen replacements for sale?

Thanks for reading, I would appreciate any comments - even if it's just moral support![/b][/u]
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caferacer
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PostPosted: 16:49 - 07 May 2014    Post subject: WIRING DIAGRAM LINK Reply with quote

Ok, so here's a scanned image of the wiring diagram for the bike.

https://farm9.staticflickr.com/8096/8441419104_e6fff249c7_o.jpg

The resistor is at the top in the centre and shows it needs 6.7 Ohms on the left hand side. The 10W 3.3 Ohm resistor from Maplin for the right hand side seems to be working fine so lets not complicate things by worrying about that.

The P wire runs to the left handlebar headlight switch. The G wire is earth. The headlight is powered directly from the alternator.
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caferacer
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PostPosted: 16:59 - 07 May 2014    Post subject: PHOTOGRAPHS OF FAULTY RESISTOR Reply with quote

Here are two photos of the faulty resistor. The first when I removed it and found the problem:
https://farm8.staticflickr.com/7412/14128446322_1b48fb9152.jpg

The second after I'd tried to solder it back together and it had caught fire under my fuel tank:
https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5467/14151494803_f12dd3c410.jpg

Look familiar to anyone?
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davebike
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PostPosted: 07:16 - 08 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

I think 20W rating is pushing it !

Potentially 14 v and 6.6 ohms gives 25watts
It is custom to over rate such thing at least 20% normally 50%

Did you bolt the 20w ones to a heat sink ?? they need one !

I try with a good heat sink if you not destroyed the resistors

then a series parallel matrix to give you 6.7/6.6 ohms at 40W

Must be bolted to a good heat sink alley plate will do

Dave
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caferacer
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PostPosted: 11:52 - 08 May 2014    Post subject: THANKS DAVE Reply with quote

Thanks Dave,

You're right, I was pushing the power levels going through these resistors at 20W.

I didn't realise people usually over estimate the wattage by up to 50%. I'm really only just getting to grips with electrics.

The 20W ones were not attached to anything as I was only trying them out.

With the 100W one from RS Components I was thinking I could bolt it to the panel the original ceramic one was mounted to and I could stick some of that heat transfer paste behind it? That way my whole bike frame will work as a huge heat sink - do you think this will work?
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davebike
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PostPosted: 11:57 - 08 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

It will. work if you get a good thermal path

Dave
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davebike1@gmail.com
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caferacer
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PostPosted: 12:02 - 08 May 2014    Post subject: CG RESISTOR Reply with quote

I'm still interested if anyone knows anything about the Honda CG 125 Ceramic Resistors?

That still looks like it could be an easy solution?
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caferacer
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PostPosted: 12:03 - 08 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

davebike wrote:
It will. work if you get a good thermal path


Thanks dave! really helpful!!!!
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Tedwood
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Joined: 08 May 2014
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PostPosted: 13:42 - 08 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

I bought a CB125RS a couple of years ago and that resistor was missing.

After a bit of research I found that the part number was 35400-KJ6-0003. Couldn't find it anywhere, but I found part 35400-KB9-9200 which I purchased on ebay from Italy it cost nearly £20.

The ebay seller I bought mine from was "bbricambi" in Italy and still appears to be selling them although not on ebay UK. Do a google search for the part number.

The resistors are rated 30W 3 ohm and 30W 6.7 ohm and was the resistor fitted to the XL125R. Haven't put my bike back together yet and tried the resistor but my guess is that it should do the job.

Also could try David Silver as he's very good at locating parts (even if they are not listed on his website) just email him and he will let you know if he can source it and the price.

I didn't know about David Silver when I got my bike so didn't try him before buying the XL125R one.

Link: https://www.davidsilverspares.co.uk/contact/
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smegballs
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PostPosted: 13:55 - 08 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

I get all my electronic components from www.spiratronics.com. They are really fast delivery, cheap enough and have really good customer service.

https://spiratronics.com/50w-aluminium-clad-wirewound-resistor-6r8.html

50W 6.8 ohm resistor here for 2 quid.
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caferacer
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PostPosted: 16:42 - 15 May 2014    Post subject: UPDATE Reply with quote

I bought the resistor smegballs suggested and attached it to a heat sink.

Seemed to be working fine but then this afternoon there was a pop and coils of wire all over the place.

Looks like I'm going to have to buy an original part from somewhere.
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Tedwood
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PostPosted: 19:35 - 15 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Did you see my message above re the xl125r resistor?
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Robby
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Joined: 16 May 2002
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PostPosted: 08:44 - 16 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Can you re-wire it to use a more stable switched live and get away from needing a ballast resistor altogether?

If you want to avoid overloading existing wiring, you could run a feed direct from the battery activated by a relay connected to a switched live power source (such as the ignition circuit).
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smegballs
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PostPosted: 11:49 - 16 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Sorry my suggestion didn't work out. It must have been pulling a lot of juice though to blow up a heatsinked 50W resistor! Might as well put another headlight bulb in and benefit from extra lighting if that is the case.
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caferacer
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PostPosted: 12:57 - 16 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Tedwood wrote:
Did you see my message above re the xl125r resistor?


Thanks Ted, yes I did. I've messaged that ebay seller but not heard back from them yet.

I've talked to David Silver spares - they say they cant get them right now but have put me on an automatic message thingy to let me know if they become available from their suppliers.

smegballs wrote:
Might as well put another headlight bulb in and benefit from extra lighting if that is the case.


I like your thinking! Might as well light the whole bike up like blackpool...

Robby wrote:
Can you re-wire it to use a more stable switched live and get away from needing a ballast resistor altogether?

If you want to avoid overloading existing wiring, you could run a feed direct from the battery activated by a relay connected to a switched live power source (such as the ignition circuit).


I have no idea what this means - what is a switched live power source. Do you mean power it from the battery?
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Robby
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PostPosted: 17:11 - 16 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Yes, power it from the battery, but run the power feed through a relay connected to one of the switched live circuits so the circuit will only be live when the ignition is on - otherwise your headlight will work with the ignition off, and you'll end up leaving the light on and discharging your battery.
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Tedwood
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Joined: 08 May 2014
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PostPosted: 22:27 - 16 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Hi caferacer,

The Italian seller has the Honda XL125R resistors (with a good photo) for sale online here:

https://www.ebay.com.my/itm/RESISTOR-ASSY-RESISTENZA-ELETTRICA-PER-HONDA-XL-125-R-ORIGINALE-35400-KB9-9200-/321401601526?

Also he will post to the UK, total 26 Euros (12 + 14 postage). I think that was the same price I paid a few years ago.
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caferacer
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PostPosted: 18:13 - 19 May 2014    Post subject: Thanks Tedwood Reply with quote

Tedwood wrote:
Hi caferacer,

The Italian seller has the Honda XL125R resistors (with a good photo) for sale online here:

https://www.ebay.com.my/itm/RESISTOR-ASSY-RESISTENZA-ELETTRICA-PER-HONDA-XL-125-R-ORIGINALE-35400-KB9-9200-/321401601526?

Also he will post to the UK, total 26 Euros (12 + 14 postage). I think that was the same price I paid a few years ago.


Superb - thanks Tedwood! I was able to order it through my UK ebay account. It came £22 total. ETA 28th May.

Isn't technology magical Dance!

I feel I made a fair effort at fixing this myself and although this does feel like a bit of a cop out I'm happy that the part I've bought is capable of doing what I need it to.

Just wish the bike was worth more than the resistor...

Thanks for all your help guys!!!
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smegballs
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PostPosted: 19:15 - 19 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Glad you got it sorted.

My reaction would be to cry "oh hell naw" and start butchering the wiring, fitting a normal modern regulator/rectifier unit and having that do all the voltage regulation.

Bloody ballast resistors, not on my watch!
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caferacer
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PostPosted: 16:01 - 01 Jun 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Just a quick update.

The replacement ballast resistor arrived and works perfectly. Identical to the original. Well worth the money to get it right.

Thanks for all your help!

Unsurprisingly I'm now having issues with my indicators not flashing. I've created a new thread to explain:

https://www.bikechatforums.com/viewtopic.php?p=3905598
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Old Thread Alert!

The last post was made 11 years, 211 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful?
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