Steve
GS Whisperer
Look back at my posts, I did not say anything contrary to that.Steve the reason for the main fuse is so that the battery does not see a short. The only reason for having an in line fuse between the r/r and the battery is because if you hooked the r/r directly to the battery you would be in danger of shorting the battery because you have violated the rule to have any connection to the battery (+) be fused.
You really only need a large fuse between the R/R and the battery, if your R/R is wired directly to the battery.
The stock MAIN fuse is inbetween the R/R and the battery. My bike has been re-wired to have the R/R go straight to the battery, instead of the "T" connection in the stock harness. There is a fuse in that "direct" line, so I did not feel one was necessary between the battery and the relay.
I think one source of confusion is the suggestion of different-size fuses in the different configurations.
In the stock setup, the R/R powers the bike through the "T" connection, and the battery only gets any leftover 'juice', which has to get there through the MAIN fuse. Before starting the bike, all the current to run the bike goes from the battery, through the MAIN fuse, then the ignition switch, back to the other fuses and on to the bike. All of that totals less than 15 amps, so the stock 15-amp fuse is fine.
However, when you run the R/R straight to the battery (through a fuse, of course), EVERYTHING is going through that fuse, not just the leftover current that is going to charge the battery. In that configuration, the 15 will likely not be enough. You have measured the output of the system, I thought it was a bit over 20 amps. Depending on the reserve you want (and the wire size), you could use a 25 amp fuse.
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