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| dragstaar |
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 dragstaar World Chat Champion

Joined: 18 Aug 2010 Karma :  
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 Posted: 19:59 - 24 Nov 2013 Post subject: SRAD 600 Keeps blowing main 30A fuse |
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Right, so my dipped beams have not been working for a while, because one of the wires in the harness must have touched something hot and melted the sheath. This left the actual copper wire exposed and it stopped working.
So I stripped the bike back, and got to the harness and unwound all the electrical tape, sprayed some ACF50 in actual exposed wire, let it seep, then wrapped it in electrical tape, then wrapped the entire thing up.
I noticed that some of the wires had been joined, but i didn't disturb them.
Once everything was safely wrapped up again, I decided to test it before putting the fairings back on. I plugged a bulb in, tested, worked, both hi and low beams.
Then I decided I may as well clean and ACF 50 it, to protect it whilst the fairings were off, so this is what I set about doing, all fairings off.
there was a spattering of drizzle at some point but not a lot.
later on, Went to start the bike, nothing. nothing at all. No life, No electric. nothing. Turns out main fuse had gone. Took it out, put new one in, and as i was putting it in, it sparked and blew. So i disconnected the battery, put another one in, and as I went to reattach the battery, it sparked at the battery terminal and the fuse blew again.
This has happened to about 4 fuses.
Now, I think the solenoid is fucked. Because the multimeter reads 12 volts at the actual terminals, and at the bit where they join the solenoid. However, the metal holes in which the blade fuse sits, read nothing.
Any idea what's causing this? is it a short circuit somewhere? |
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| Kickstart |
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 Kickstart The Oracle

Joined: 04 Feb 2002 Karma :     
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 Posted: 20:16 - 24 Nov 2013 Post subject: |
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Hi
Depends on the solenoid. Some (normally on Hondas) control the power to most of the electrics. This type are the ones I would expect to have a large fuse on them.
If it is popping the fuse then it suggests something is feeding to earth. Check for resistance between the solenoid terminals and earth, and chase down the circuit where that resistance is nominal.
Most solenoids don't have a fuse on them, but just control the power to the starter motor.
All the best
Keith ____________________ Traxpics, track day and racing photographs - Bimota Forum - Bike performance / thrust graphs for choosing gearing |
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| dragstaar |
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 dragstaar World Chat Champion

Joined: 18 Aug 2010 Karma :  
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| Kickstart |
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 Kickstart The Oracle

Joined: 04 Feb 2002 Karma :     
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 Posted: 21:03 - 24 Nov 2013 Post subject: |
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Hi
Looking around I found this thread elsewhere with a wiring diagram.
Looks like it is a combined relay that also controls the power to the rest of the loom. Looks like 4 small wires go to it. One red from the regulator / rectifier (charging). A black / white and a green / yellow which trigger the starter and another red that disappears off into the loom to the ignition switch and then to power everything. Directly to the light switch and for everything else via the a fuse.
I would suggest pulling the other fuses from the fusebox (and probably disconnecting the light switch as well), then ignition on with a new main fuse and see if it pops. At least will let you know which circuit the short is on.
All the best
Keith ____________________ Traxpics, track day and racing photographs - Bimota Forum - Bike performance / thrust graphs for choosing gearing |
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| dragstaar |
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 dragstaar World Chat Champion

Joined: 18 Aug 2010 Karma :  
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| WD Forte |
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 WD Forte World Chat Champion

Joined: 17 Jun 2010 Karma :   
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 Posted: 02:43 - 26 Nov 2013 Post subject: |
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Hi
Dont know that bike well but it isnt the pos and neg from the battery on those large screws.
One is directly from the battery pos and you'll get 12v at it all times
The other goes to the starter motor and will only have a voltage when the solenoid is operating to spin the motor
No ones mentioned a meter yet
Even the cheapest thing will really help trace the fault by using the voltage and continuity functions
As I said I dont know that model and obviously not its history but
on a lot of bikes DC power out from the regulator goes to a point at or near the solenoid and main fuse and is connected to both the battery pos and igntion switch
Often at the battery positive terminal of the solenoid
It sounds as if you have a dead short between the solenoid and igntion switch
If there's anything on the bike which is permanently powered
so not fed by the igntion switch, then faults here may cause a short to ground as well.
Alarm, Fuel relay, stuff like that
With a meter and some selective disconnecting you'd probaly trace the fault pretty quickly ____________________ bikers smell of wee |
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| 69chris |
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 69chris Trackday Trickster

Joined: 10 May 2011 Karma :  
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 Posted: 03:26 - 26 Nov 2013 Post subject: |
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my 600 srad did similar to this, it was a wire had that come out of the reg/rec plug (under l/h/s panel iirc) and was shorting on the subframe, wasnt obvious at 1st as it looked ok at a glance, wasnt till it was un-plugged that it showed itself,
the whole plug looked 'cooked' so i guess it had been loose for a while, but after a quick an easy fix all was well  |
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| supZ |
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 supZ World Chat Champion

Joined: 03 Feb 2009 Karma :   
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| Kickstart |
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 Kickstart The Oracle

Joined: 04 Feb 2002 Karma :     
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| dragstaar |
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 dragstaar World Chat Champion

Joined: 18 Aug 2010 Karma :  
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| dragstaar |
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 dragstaar World Chat Champion

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| Pete. |
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 Pete. Super Spammer

Joined: 22 Aug 2006 Karma :     
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 Posted: 00:09 - 02 Dec 2013 Post subject: |
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You must be completely fucking mad. ____________________ a.k.a 'Geri'
132.9mph off and walked away. Gear is good, gear is good, gear is very very good  |
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| 69chris |
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 69chris Trackday Trickster

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 Kickstart The Oracle

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| dragstaar |
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 dragstaar World Chat Champion

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| Raffles |
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 Raffles World Chat Champion
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| Kickstart |
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 Kickstart The Oracle

Joined: 04 Feb 2002 Karma :     
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 Posted: 23:19 - 02 Dec 2013 Post subject: |
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| dragstaar wrote: |
Okay, so this is definitely a "fucking check it out asap" issue then???
It seems to ride fine bar one problem. Every now and then, it will suddenly cut out as if the battery got disconnected, but for less than a second, and then its back up and going again. Just the smallest blip. But otherwise all cool.
So if it is a short, i'm assuming I need to trace from the ignition? |
If I understand you correctly your bike is currently running fine without a main fuse. That suggests that somewhere there is a short between the battery and a wire after the solenoid.
Where this short is would badly worry me. Without knowing that it could potentially be melting a wire as it is parked up, waiting to catch fire (yes, being a bit alarmist there).
However looking at the wiring diagram I linked to earlier it doesn't look likely that there is a way for this to happen. Looks like there is a single large wire to the solenoid (and another large wire from it to the starter motor), with everything after that going through the fuse. Based on that I would suspect that the solenoid itself is goosed.
Whether that is the cause of the problem you were having, or an effect I wouldn't like to say.
All the best
Keith ____________________ Traxpics, track day and racing photographs - Bimota Forum - Bike performance / thrust graphs for choosing gearing |
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| WD Forte |
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 WD Forte World Chat Champion

Joined: 17 Jun 2010 Karma :   
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| dragstaar |
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 dragstaar World Chat Champion

Joined: 18 Aug 2010 Karma :  
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 Posted: 23:54 - 03 Dec 2013 Post subject: |
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https://img814.imageshack.us/img814/1337/scan0001g.jpg
That there is the fitting diagram for the cyclone alarm and immobiliser that I have fitted. The cables for the immobiliser part splice into the ignition cables.
You then remove the fuse. This way, the immobiliser box acts as the fuse. I.e, you disarm, so the box allows current through. Armed, and the circuit remains broken.
If you leave the fuse in, the immobiliser doesn't function. As in the alarm starts squealing, but you can fire it up as normal and ride away (its a cheapo system).
So given this, even though the box is disconnected from the battery, the cables are still connected to the ignition cables (except the remote start cable).
Do you think that the box is still allowing the current to be routed through, despite not being connected to the battery? I suppose I can only be sure if I disconnect the immobiliser fully.
As for the solenoid, I do think that might be the issue. Because the bike cut out today, and then struggled to start. Bump started it again, and it was fine. Then on the way home it started up fine, no issues. Sounds like its likely to be a bummed solenoid. I've already bought one, so I might just swap that out and see what happens.
WD forte, as for your instructions, I'm a little confused. You have to remember that I'm a bit of a numpty. The solenoid has a red cable connecting to one terminal which comes from the +ive at the battery. The black cable next to it seems to feed through to the ignition switch on the handlebar. Then at the bottom of the solenoid, there's also cables going to the starter motor. So should I read it across these points? |
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| Kickstart |
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 Kickstart The Oracle

Joined: 04 Feb 2002 Karma :     
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 Posted: 01:07 - 04 Dec 2013 Post subject: |
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Hi
That suggests the ignition fuse, not the 30a fuse that controls power to the bike (ie, the one on the solenoid on your bike). The ignition fuse is in the fuse box.
I may have been getting confused over which fuse is missing, and which one is blowing.
As to the instructions WD Forte gave you. There should be 6 wires. A large red wire to the battery and a large black wire to the starter motor. These are not fused. There should be no circuit between these unless the starter button is pressed.
There should be 4 other wires the black / white wire and the yellow / green wire are to trigger the solenoid to operate the starter motor. The black and white wire should feed to earth while the other should only get power when the ignition is on and the starter button pressed.
The important wires are the 2 small red wires. One of these feeds to the regulator / rectifier and the other to the ignition switch.
All the best
Keith ____________________ Traxpics, track day and racing photographs - Bimota Forum - Bike performance / thrust graphs for choosing gearing |
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| dragstaar |
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 dragstaar World Chat Champion

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| devojunior |
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 devojunior Brolly Dolly
Joined: 12 Sep 2010 Karma :   
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 Posted: 16:48 - 04 Dec 2013 Post subject: Re: SRAD 600 Keeps blowing main 30A fuse |
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| dragstaar wrote: | Right, so my dipped beams have not been working for a while, because one of the wires in the harness must have touched something hot and melted the sheath. This left the actual copper wire exposed and it stopped working.
So I stripped the bike back, and got to the harness and unwound all the electrical tape, sprayed some ACF50 in actual exposed wire, let it seep, then wrapped it in electrical tape, then wrapped the entire thing up.
I noticed that some of the wires had been joined, but i didn't disturb them.
Once everything was safely wrapped up again, I decided to test it before putting the fairings back on. I plugged a bulb in, tested, worked, both hi and low beams.
Then I decided I may as well clean and ACF 50 it, to protect it whilst the fairings were off, so this is what I set about doing, all fairings off.
there was a spattering of drizzle at some point but not a lot.
later on, Went to start the bike, nothing. nothing at all. No life, No electric. nothing. Turns out main fuse had gone. Took it out, put new one in, and as i was putting it in, it sparked and blew. So i disconnected the battery, put another one in, and as I went to reattach the battery, it sparked at the battery terminal and the fuse blew again.
This has happened to about 4 fuses.
Now, I think the solenoid is fucked. Because the multimeter reads 12 volts at the actual terminals, and at the bit where they join the solenoid. However, the metal holes in which the blade fuse sits, read nothing.
Any idea what's causing this? is it a short circuit somewhere? |
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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 12 years, 216 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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