1982 XJ1100.
The battery is dead when I go to start it. No big deal. I have a charger. Bring it back up to full charge and it's fine, but I'm wondering why it went dead. Good batterys don't just lose their charge for no reason. My charger has an alternator check function. So, letting the bike idle it says that the alternator is bad, not charging. I test again while holding the engine at a steady 2,000rpms and now it says the alternator is good. I don't think that's unusual. From what I've read, the charging system isn't really charging until a certain rpm is maintained. As a rule, I keep it above 3,000 while driving. I'm wondering if this is related to the recent addition of a set of fog lights. I mounted a set of lights and put them on their own circuit directly to the battery. When the engine is running and I turn on the fog lights, I can hear the engine labor down slightly. Even a little tells me that those lights are putting quite a heavy load on the charging system. As to why the battery lost it's charge, and now it seems to be fine, I think it's because I ran the fog lights while driving in traffic, causing the engine to be idling a lot, and not producing enough charge for the battery. Is this to be expected, or should I be looking for a problem with the charging system? I see plenty of bikes with three headlights. Either they have two batteries or two alternators or the charging system on my bike is just not what it should be. What to think?
The battery is dead when I go to start it. No big deal. I have a charger. Bring it back up to full charge and it's fine, but I'm wondering why it went dead. Good batterys don't just lose their charge for no reason. My charger has an alternator check function. So, letting the bike idle it says that the alternator is bad, not charging. I test again while holding the engine at a steady 2,000rpms and now it says the alternator is good. I don't think that's unusual. From what I've read, the charging system isn't really charging until a certain rpm is maintained. As a rule, I keep it above 3,000 while driving. I'm wondering if this is related to the recent addition of a set of fog lights. I mounted a set of lights and put them on their own circuit directly to the battery. When the engine is running and I turn on the fog lights, I can hear the engine labor down slightly. Even a little tells me that those lights are putting quite a heavy load on the charging system. As to why the battery lost it's charge, and now it seems to be fine, I think it's because I ran the fog lights while driving in traffic, causing the engine to be idling a lot, and not producing enough charge for the battery. Is this to be expected, or should I be looking for a problem with the charging system? I see plenty of bikes with three headlights. Either they have two batteries or two alternators or the charging system on my bike is just not what it should be. What to think?
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