M
mostholycerebus
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My bad, found it.
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Required reading for all forum users!!!
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You can connect the sense wire directly to the "+" on the battery, but you need to do it through a relay & inline fuse because these R/Rs are designed to be switched, as they draw parasitic current when the bike is not running which will flatten the battery eventually.
This gives better regulation than the sense wire being wired into the harness somewhere. If the sense wire is connected to the harness somewhere then that is the reference point used (and this could include voltage drop between this point and the battery). The battery is then being charged (over charged) according to what is happening at the brake light switch for example.
If the sense wire is connected directly to the battery it is sensing exactly what is going on there and the regulator responds accordingly.
There are some good explanations on this topic by BAKALORZ.
You can connect the sense wire directly to the "+" on the battery, but you need to do it through a relay & inline fuse because these R/Rs are designed to be switched, as they draw parasitic current when the bike is not running which will flatten the battery eventually.
Unfortunately, there does seem to be some resistance now. When I had the sense wired direct-to-battery I was getting a solid 13.5v at 1500rpm, and a solid 14.5v at 4000rpm. Now i seem to get 15v regardless of rpm.
You can connect the sense wire directly to the "+" on the battery, but you need to do it through a relay & inline fuse because these R/Rs are designed to be switched, as they draw parasitic current when the bike is not running which will flatten the battery eventually.
Apparently the Honda R/R designers did not think to make the sense input high enough impedance (resistance) to make this current drain a non issue. That is surprising as it would only take about 10K ohms to make this an non issue. I have never measured it myself this current draw myself but I might actually check it.
Regardless to be on the safe side, the sense wire simply needs to be located at a point that is disconnected from the battery when the bike is at rest. That could be the output of a relay or attached to the tail light wire as I think is recommended by Dunage.
There should be no reason to fuse the wire.
Pos
Thats highly irresponsible advice.
Did you even read the post you quoted ?
I highlighted the relevant parts for you so you don't miss it again.
If you do it via a relay, the whole point of the relay is to run that wire directly to the battery and avoid any sharing of that path with high current loads.
In that case you darn well do need a fuse unless you want to risk your bike catching fire.
Sheesh.
P.S. for the original poster, any 12 volt automotive relay will be fine as far as the current rating current goes.
There were some discussions in other threads regarding vibration resistance of the various relays available.
For a fairly detailed description of how to connect the relay see post 35 of this thread.
If that doesn't make it clear to you, I remember that there is also somewhere a description of how to connect it using the terminal numbers on the most common relays, but I couldn't find it in a brief search.
So, best case would be to use the same relay to handle both the coils and sense wire?
I chose the oil pressure sensor wire because, at least on my GS700, it was close to the reg/rec, is energized when and only when the ignition is on, and wiring the sense wire into it from a Honda reg/rec (grounded directly to the neg. battery terminal) gives me 14.2 VDC from 3,000 rpms to infinity.