Brake light always on - 1979 GS850

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  • Steve
    replied
    Originally posted by natejelovich
    OK, now I am really confused... I retried the test and it worked. I unplugged all of the wires (including license plate light) and re-hooked up the two wire test. Touched the brown, tail light came on. Touched the white, brake light came on (brightly).
    Sounds GREAT!!

    That tells you that the wiring, sockets and bulbs are all in good shape.


    Originally posted by natejelovich
    I don't know what changed exactly, but when I did the test, it worked (meaning, the lights came on as they were supposed to). I tested quite a few times to make sure and it seems like it's fine...
    What changed is that you eliminated a BUNCH of "iffy" wiring connections and started from scratch with just ONE connection. That one happens to test "OK".


    Originally posted by natejelovich
    But, I plugged the white connector in to the other side again, tested the brake switches, and still nothing... So, after all of that, back to square one.

    Next test?
    Do you remember what I said back in post #19?
    Originally posted by Steve
    Testing in a systematic way will eliminate variables as you go. ... Once we see the results of those tests, we will move on to the next one.
    Now that you know that the lights are working, we can work on what is feeding the lights.

    Do you have a test light or a voltmeter? Either will work, but a test light is easier and quicker. Clip the ground wire for the test light to the battery negative or a good chassis ground. Put the point of the probe in the white connector's brown wire. Turn the ignition key ON, you should have power. If not, check your other lights to see if they are working. If they are, your fuse is OK, so the problem will be between the ignition key and the tail light.

    .

    Leave a comment:


  • cowboyup3371
    replied
    You need to pull tape back from both sides (taillight and harness) and check for yourself. Did you take a power test light and hold it against the harness end of your connector to check for power on the brown and white wires? If so, and you got power there, then it's on the taillight side.

    BTW, take a picture of that connector plugged in please. Do the wires line up properly?

    Leave a comment:


  • natejelovich
    Guest replied
    Originally posted by cowboyup3371
    If you plugged the connector back in then something is wrong there. Start peeling off the tape from both sides and check your wiring.
    Could the problem be anywhere else or do you think it's just at the connector?

    Leave a comment:


  • cowboyup3371
    replied
    If you plugged the connector back in then something is wrong there. Start peeling off the tape from both sides and check your wiring.

    Leave a comment:


  • natejelovich
    Guest replied
    Originally posted by Steve
    Just running the test wires from the (charged) battery to those wires that are in your fingers. At the first of your last post, you said that you got nothing, I find that very strange.

    Oh, while the white and brown wires do go to the tail/brake light, you need to know that the brown one is specifically for the tail light and the white one is for the brake light.

    With ALL the wires disconnected from the bike and your test wires connected to the black and brown wires, your license light should not light, but the tail light should.

    .
    OK, now I am really confused... I retried the test and it worked. I unplugged all of the wires (including license plate light) and re-hooked up the two wire test. Touched the brown, tail light came on. Touched the white, brake light came on (brightly).

    Before I did that, I checked to make sure the bike would engage (and it did) to ensure the battery was charged. I also removed the bulb and put it back in. I also made sure the ground on the chassis was on well.

    I don't know what changed exactly, but when I did the test, it worked (meaning, the lights came on as they were supposed to). I tested quite a few times to make sure and it seems like it's fine...

    But, I plugged the white connector in to the other side again, tested the brake switches, and still nothing... So, after all of that, back to square one.

    Next test?

    Leave a comment:


  • Steve
    replied
    Originally posted by natejelovich
    OK, did this (disconnected all connections to the tail light) and did the test. Results: no lights came on...

    So, I removed all wires from the tail light unit, did the test, and none of the lights (license or tail/brake) came on. Is that normal?
    OK, you disconnected all the connections, then used your two test wires to connect the battery to the light, and got nothing?

    The only two reasons I can see for that happening would be 1) a dead battery and 2) your tail light assembly is messed up. Since you have seen the lights come on rather recently, I don't think it's #2.



    Originally posted by natejelovich
    I've checked out the wire diagrams before (a bit like hieroglyphs to me before all of this but with your help I think I'm understand it more.).
    Yes, it looks like a big tangled mess of spaghetti, but it's not all that hard. The only wires you need to be concerned about at this time are the black, white and brown wires that go to the tail light assembly. Yeah, the gray one to the license light is there, too, but it has its own connector. If you look in the middle of the right side of the diagram, you will see the light and the wires. The black bar that goes across the three wires is your white connector, so you can stop looking there and only worry about what is to the right of that connector.


    Originally posted by natejelovich
    Looking at the diagram and my bike, everything looks correct...

    Gray wire: connects to license light
    White wire: connects to tail/brake light
    Brown wire: connects to tail/brake light



    Anything I'm missing?
    Just running the test wires from the (charged) battery to those wires that are in your fingers. At the first of your last post, you said that you got nothing, I find that very strange.

    Oh, while the white and brown wires do go to the tail/brake light, you need to know that the brown one is specifically for the tail light and the white one is for the brake light.

    With ALL the wires disconnected from the bike and your test wires connected to the black and brown wires, your license light should not light, but the tail light should.

    .

    Leave a comment:


  • natejelovich
    Guest replied
    Originally posted by Steve
    Please disconnect ALL the hwiring at the back of the bike, it's not really all that much. There should be the 3-pin connector to the tail light, a gray wire that feeds the license light and four bullet connectors to the turn signals. Please make sure they are ALL disconnected so there is NO electrical path from the front of the bike to those lights.

    Repeat the two wires into the 3-pin connector test. If your license light changes brightness, there is something wrong in that assembly, unless there is some "customized" wiring between the white connector and the bulbs.
    OK, did this (disconnected all connections to the tail light) and did the test. Results: no lights came on...

    So, I removed all wires from the tail light unit, did the test, and none of the lights (license or tail/brake) came on. Is that normal?

    Originally posted by Steve
    If you go to BassCliff's site, (bookmark it, you will be using it a LOT) you can get a very nice copy of a color wiring diagram for an 850. It's not quite the right one for your bike, but it has the easiest-to-follow colored wires. The difference between that '80 diagram and your '79 bike are the igntion (points vs electronic) and the turn signal controller (different style, different wires feeding the controller). Other than those items, that is a very good diagram to follow. Click HERE to get the diagram for your '79.

    I have a sneaking suspicion that there are some wires crossed in there, it will be easiest to just pull them all and start from scratch.

    .
    Yes, BassCliff's site has been awesome! I've checked out the wire diagrams before (a bit like hieroglyphs to me before all of this but with your help I think I'm understand it more.). Looking at the diagram and my bike, everything looks correct...

    Gray wire: connects to license light
    White wire: connects to tail/brake light
    Brown wire: connects to tail/brake light



    Anything I'm missing?

    Leave a comment:


  • Steve
    replied
    OK, Cowboyup saw something in your latest pictures that might change things a bit, and this probably confirms it.
    Originally posted by natejelovich
    Just did... and same result. Grounded the wire to the bike, and plugged it into the black (ground) wire in the white connector. Then, plugged another wire into the battery and the other end into the brown (both bulbs dimly lit, but only one filament on the brake light) and then the white (only the license plate light brightly on).
    The license light should not change birghtness, it should only be ON or OFF.

    What Cowboyup noticed was some "iffy" wiring. Please disconnect ALL the hwiring at the back of the bike, it's not really all that much. There should be the 3-pin connector to the tail light, a gray wire that feeds the license light and four bullet connectors to the turn signals. Please make sure they are ALL disconnected so there is NO electrical path from the front of the bike to those lights.

    Repeat the two wires into the 3-pin connector test. If your license light changes brightness, there is something wrong in that assembly, unless there is some "customized" wiring between the white connector and the bulbs.

    If you go to BassCliff's site, (bookmark it, you will be using it a LOT) you can get a very nice copy of a color wiring diagram for an 850. It's not quite the right one for your bike, but it has the easiest-to-follow colored wires. The difference between that '80 diagram and your '79 bike are the igntion (points vs electronic) and the turn signal controller (different style, different wires feeding the controller). Other than those items, that is a very good diagram to follow. Click HERE to get the diagram for your '79.

    I have a sneaking suspicion that there are some wires crossed in there, it will be easiest to just pull them all and start from scratch.

    .

    Leave a comment:


  • cowboyup3371
    replied
    Originally posted by natejelovich
    Is this what you need?

    First, I'm nowhere the electrical expert that Steve is so please continue to listen to him. He has helped many a person through electrical issues here.

    However, something is very definitely wrong. The top connector there is your taillight/brake light connector from the harness that should plug into your connector at the bottom. The two black and white bullet connectors in the harness should be the grounds for your turn signals while the green and white bullet connectors in the harness are for power to the signals. So, why do you have an extra white wire coming from the taillight/brakelight wiring section?

    I'd remove the tape or harness covering from both sections and really look them over before doing anything else. I think someone else might have jerry-rigged that section to fix another problem instead of just doing it correctly.

    Do you have a copy of your bike's wiring diagram? If not, get to Basscliff's site and download it.

    Leave a comment:


  • natejelovich
    Guest replied
    Originally posted by natejelovich
    Hi Steve,

    I will give the updated version a try.
    Just did... and same result. Grounded the wire to the bike, and plugged it into the black (ground) wire in the white connector. Then, plugged another wire into the battery and the other end into the brown (both bulbs dimly lit, but only one filament on the brake light) and then the white (only the license plate light brightly on).

    Leave a comment:


  • natejelovich
    Guest replied
    Originally posted by cowboyup3371
    Something about the connector at the harness area isn't right. Take a good picture of that please so we can see it better.
    Is this what you need?

    Leave a comment:


  • natejelovich
    Guest replied
    Hi Steve,

    Yes... I think something did get lost in the transfer! From your earlier note, this is what I did:

    Originally posted by steve
    Insert one end into the connector that is attached to the tail light, connect the other to a good ground (chassis, battery, whatever).
    So, now it sounds like there should be mention of the ground wire being grounded... from the quote above, it sounded to me like I was supposed to ground the brown (tail light) wire... Again, amateur here so everything (though it sounds a bit off) sounds right to me!

    I did ground the wire to the chassis, but I inserted the grounded wire into the brown connector.

    Originally posted by steve
    Please verify for my simple little mind:
    - One end of a wire is connected to battery (-) or the chassis, the other end stuck into the white 3-pin connector at the tail light, and touching the black wire ONLY.
    (Do not connect it to the side of the connector that is attached to the wire harness on the bike, go to the connector that is attached to the tail light.)
    I will give the updated version a try.

    Leave a comment:


  • Steve
    replied
    Originally posted by Steve
    OK, more questions:
    1. When you touched the hot to the black wire, where was your ground wire?
    That black wire is for GROUND ONLY, the hot wire should never touch it.
    Originally posted by natejelovich
    I grounded the wire to the bike. I did touch the black (ground) with the hot wire, and it only turned on the license plate light (that same brightness)....
    Something is getting lost in the transfer of information here, not sure on which end, though.

    If I am understanding this correctly, I asked where your ground wire was. You said it was grounded to the bike. Earlier, I asked you to connect one end of a wire to either the chassis or the battery negative terminal, and connect the other end to the black wire that goes to the tail light. Evidently that was not connected in that manner, because if it was, when you touched the hot wire to the black wire, you would have had FIREWORKS.

    Please verify for my simple little mind:
    - One end of a wire is connected to battery (-) or the chassis, the other end stuck into the white 3-pin connector at the tail light, and touching the black wire ONLY.
    (Do not connect it to the side of the connector that is attached to the wire harness on the bike, go to the connector that is attached to the tail light.)

    - One end of another wire is connected to the battery (+), the other end is being held in your hand for testing.

    - With the free end of the "hot" wire, touch the brown wire in the 3-pin connector. What lights up? How bright is it?

    - With the free end of the "hot" wire, touch the white wire in the 3-pin connector. What lights up? How bright is it?

    .

    Leave a comment:


  • cowboyup3371
    replied
    Something about the connector at the harness area isn't right. Take a good picture of that please so we can see it better.

    Leave a comment:


  • natejelovich
    Guest replied
    Originally posted by Steve
    OK, more questions:
    1. When you touched the hot to the black wire, where was your ground wire?
    That black wire is for GROUND ONLY, the hot wire should never touch it.

    2. A 1034 is OK, they are sometimes harder to find. Either one will work.

    3. And yet, it did in a previous test.


    Your license light (the lower one) should have a single-filament bulb, probably a 67 or an 89. It should only be ONE brightness, because it only has a single filament.

    In one of your previous posts, you show both filaments ON, apparently while following a request to ground the black wire and power the brown wire. Your next test, powering the white wire, changed the brightness in the wrong bulb. I have a sneaking suspicion that somebody has crossed up some wiring or swapped sockets for the lights. How that might have happened, I don't know, but "previous owners" can be really crafty people.

    I will repeat a previous request: remove the whole assembly from the bike so you can track where the wiring goes.

    .
    Sorry, meant brake light, not tail light. The brake light never came on in any of the tests. The tail light did...

    I grounded the wire to the bike. I did touch the black (ground) with the hot wire, and it only turned on the license plate light (that same brightness)....

    Here's the wiring. I think it looks good, but I don't know much!





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