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sculler2x

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Posts posted by sculler2x

  1. I have had 3 G8HE relays fail.  The specs for the G8HE and the G8JN are almost identical.  The JN is a much larger package and it is vibration rated as well as rated for 100 amp inrush.  People have have commented about how hot the HE get.  The JN runs cool, it does have a lower power density in terms of coil watts per CC.

  2. This year I put in a new regulator and the voltage is now consistently 14V.  Previously, the first 40Kmiles, it had been about 12.5.  I never had a problem with the fuel pump relay. I replaced the factory ones with the recommended Omron units a long time ago. This year I have had to replace the Omron one twice.  The third time I rewired it to a much larger Omron G8JN-1C6T unit.  Of course this solved the problem but it seams to have fixed another as well.

     

    The beast has always stumbled at part throttle below 3K RPM. From the schematic it looks like the relay also sends power to the coils. No doubt the contact resistance is lower on the new part but I don't think that would explain the improvement. Any ideas?

  3. I put one in my 2002 LM last night.  I had to cut away some of the bucket to clear the fan.   I also opened it enough to get a little more access to fresh air.  If it runs a little hotter it will reduce the lifetime but it is a good trade off.  By the way life time is defined by the output dropping %50 so it will not go dark by surprise.  attached are some photos

     

     

    another photo

     

    fan.jpg

    • Like 1
  4. I put one in my 2002 LM last night.  I had to cut away some of the bucket to clear the fan.   I also opened it enough to get a little more access to fresh air.  If it runs a little hotter it will reduce the lifetime but it is a good trade off.  By the way life time is defined by the output dropping %50 so it will not go dark by surprise.  attached are some photos

    bucket.jpg

    • Like 1
  5. Saturday, I put my gas tank back on and put some fuel in it.  I primed the system by toggling the kill switch, this drives all the air out of the lines.  This resulted in fuel spraying from somewhere.  I removed the regulator and took it apart.  I found 2 possible sources.

     

    1 The cast housing had a ragged parting line on the hose barb.  I filed and sanded it smooth.

     

    2 The O-rings inside were unlubricated.  I lubed them with fuel proof grease and put it back together.

     

    This solved the leaking problem.  I discovered while I had the regulator apart that there was no adjustment possible.  I had often wondered what the small stalk sticking out of the side was for.  I suspect that you could connect it to the manifold on a supercharged engine to deliver higher injector pressure when there is boost.

  6. I have an elcheepo car charger that I have sooped up.  I put a digital panel volt meter on it for starters.  I then added a wall mount lamp dimmer, on the high voltage side,  so that I can control the voltage. The dimmer says to use on a resistive load only but it has been working fine for more than 10 years.  There was plenty of space inside the box for everything.  Before I added the dimmer the voltage would go way over 15  but now I can cut it back.

    • Like 1
  7. Here is my solution.  I ran a #4 wire from the battery negative to the bolt on the starter.  I ran a #8 wire from the regulator to the starter bolt on top of the battery cable.  this way the start current goes right to the starter and the regulator has a great path back to the battery

     

     

    v11_ground.jpg

  8. Hi

     

    just a word of warning based on my own experiences. My V11 has around 75K miles on it and up to 60K miles, it was eating wheel bearings quite regularly, 3 times at the front and 4 at the rear. Being a suspicious sort, I then checked the bearing spacer length and compared it to the distance between the bearing mounting faces, and found the front was 0.2mm undersize and the rear 0.5mm(!). I then reassembled new bearings with bearing shims to correct the problem and have had no problems since.

     

    The bearings incidentally are very common sizes, and are available anywhere. Two frustrations for me are the lack of any weather protection, just the rubber seals on the bearings, and those bloody different sizes at the front.......

     

    Cheers

     

    Guzz

    Based on this report I decided to measure the spacer on my 02.  I found the the spacer was 0.5 mm too long for the distance between the wheel flanges. This was easy to fix because a machine shop reports to me.  Now I know why the bearings were shot at 30K miles.

  9. Yes Stainless does not like anything and yes it galls it also forms an electrochemical cell with Aluminum.  A little water gets in there and the aluminum turns to aluminum oxide. This is why it is a good idea to use either anti-seize or locktite.  Either of them keeps the water out.  I am in the aerospace business and sometimes we use Titanium bolts in aluminum.  It is still wise to use anti-seize or thread locker to keep the water out.

  10. I ran a 4 gage wire from the battery negative to the starter motor mount bolt.  This gives the best path for the high current when starting.  I learned this on my BMW R100S and it makes a big improvement.  I also ran an 8 gage wire from the regulator ground to the same starter motor bolt on top of the battery negative.

  11. I replaced the high pressure fuel lines on my V11 and now I have a fuel leak and it is not the lines or clamps.  When it is cool fuel comes out where the T fitting goes into the injector.  Any ideas on how to stop this?

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