• Required reading for all forum users!!!

    Welcome!
    Register to access the full functionality of the GSResources forum. Until you register and activate your account you will not have full forum access, nor will you be able to post or reply to messages.

    A note to new registrants...
    All new forum registrations must be activated via email before you have full access to the forum.

    A Special Note about Email accounts!
    DO NOT SIGN UP USING hotmail, outlook, gmx, sbcglobal, att, bellsouth or email.com. They delete our forum signup emails.

    A note to old forum members...
    I receive numerous requests from people who can no longer log in because their accounts were deleted. As mentioned in the forum FAQ, user accounts are deleted if you haven't logged in for the past 6 months. If you can't log in, then create a new forum account. If you don't get an error message, then check your email account for an activation message. If you get a message stating that the email address is already in use, then your account still exists so follow the instructions in the forum FAQ for resetting your password.

    Have you forgotten your password or have a new email address? Then read the forum FAQ for details on how to reset it.

    Any email requests for "can't log in anymore" problems or "lost my password" problems will be deleted. Read the forum FAQ and follow the instructions there - that's what we have one for...

  • Returning Visitors

    If you are a returning visitor who never received your confirmation email, then odds are your email provider is blockinig emails from our server. The only thing that can be done to get around this is you will have to try creating another forum account using an email address from another domain.

    If you are a returning visitor to the forum and can't log in using your old forum name and password but used to be able to then chances are your account is deleted. Purges of the databases are done regularly. You will have to create a new forum account and you should be all set.

What happened here?

Big T

Forum Guru
Super Site Supporter
Past Site Supporter
So, I ride my 78 to Cars N Coffee Sat AM, then planning a 200 mile ride for the day

I gear up to leave C n C, no power. Attempt bump start, nothing. No dash or headlights or anything else

I get home and check the fuses, everything is intact there and fuses are good. Go to remove known problematic fuse panel and check the connections on the back and found this: (see photo)

Male part of the connector goes to the fuse panel.IMG_20180721_174802807.jpgIMG_20180721_174802807.jpg
 
The fuse panel is fine and all of the fuses are intact

IMG_20180724_145839892.jpg

Just that one connection caused this?
 
Day-um...

hard to believe a fuse didn't blow when that much heat was generated.

A short in the connector itself? The burn pattern looks suspiciously like it is tracking through just one connection where the orange (?) wire runs through.

That main lead wire in the second photo looks a little crispy, though it might just be dirt.
 
Ed,

It's been 1,000 degrees in the garage, and I need to strip the tank (which I just filled up) and fairing to check the ends of that circuit.

That said, that burned connector fits in the rubber pouch behind the battery, and nothing else there is melted, so I'm thinking - shorted elsewhere, this was the weak/corroded link in the circuit?
 
D - that big red wire is the main power feed from the battery to the fuse box. It's got a woven cover on it that is dirty after 40 years of use.

Yeah, it's the orange/green wire on the Signal circuit.
 
it may not be a short, it could be a bad connection that builds up heat over time due to the increasing resistance. I have had stranded wire that corroded to the point where only 1/2 of the strands were carrying the current and yes, they got hot.
 
Orange = power

Short?


Dirty contacts that overheat. You need current (but notnecessarilyy a short). Clearly, those contacts were getting hot ,everywhere something was crimped).


Get some DeoXit
 
it may not be a short, it could be a bad connection that builds up heat over time due to the increasing resistance. I have had stranded wire that corroded to the point where only 1/2 of the strands were carrying the current and yes, they got hot.

+1 Bingo .........
 
Back
Top