Help!! I let the battery on my 80 xs11 get too low and tried to jump it with cables from my wife's car. I'm okay so far, but I cross connected the pos and neg and shorted something. I have checked all of the fuses behind the right side cover, but could not locate any fuses behind the left side cover per the owners manual. Any thoughts?
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I really screwed the pooch!
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If there is the fuse on the left side, it may be closer to under the seat. Look for an inline glass fuse holder that has room for a spare fuse.
Good Luck!Ray Matteis
KE6NHG
XS1100 E '78 (winter project)
XS1100 SF Bob Jones worked on it!
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Hmmm.... I checked, but no fuses. Let me make sure that I'm looking in the right place. On the left side of the bike I am looking at the tool kit and the neg side of the battery. I don't see anything resembling a fuse block. There have been a couple of mods to this bike, like an oil cooler and different signals. If someone was going to move or eliminate this fuse cluster, where would it go?1980 XS Eleven Special
Black on Black
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Just fill it with water (distilled?) and charge it.
When a battery is dead, it's just water in there, albiet very bad tasting water!
(don't ask me how I know...)Nice day, if it doesn't rain...
'05 ST1300
'83 502/502 Monte Carlo for sale/trade
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Replace the battery ... Yes you can fill it and charge it but your asking to have it let you down somewhere when unexpected. These bikes need a GOOD battery to run the electrical system so taking a battery and using it after it has been let to dry out or even worse had the fluid boiled off by over charging is playing with fire .
RobKEEP THE RUBBER SIDE DOWN
1978 XS1100E Modified
1978 XS500E
1979 XS1100F Restored
1980 XS1100 SG
1981 Suzuki GS1100
1983 Suzuki GS750S Katana
1983 Honda CB900 Custom
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Well, unlike the suspicious sams around here, I never assume anything.
I would fill it and charge it. Slowly, overnight at 2amps or less, then TRY it.
It is likely hooped, but it never hurts to try it. You'll know one way or the other pretty quickly.
You can also have the battery tested, if it takes a charge at all.
As for letting you down, ANY battery, or any other component can leave you stranded at any time. Just replacing things because it might let you down means you can't keep any vehicle for more than the warranty period!Nice day, if it doesn't rain...
'05 ST1300
'83 502/502 Monte Carlo for sale/trade
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Originally posted by Crazcnuk
Well, unlike the suspicious sams around here, I never assume anything.
I would fill it and charge it. Slowly, overnight at 2amps or less, then TRY it.
It is likely hooped, but it never hurts to try it. You'll know one way or the other pretty quickly.
You can also have the battery tested, if it takes a charge at all.
As for letting you down, ANY battery, or any other component can leave you stranded at any time. Just replacing things because it might let you down means you can't keep any vehicle for more than the warranty period!
PREVENTATIVE maintenance is good practice. Replacing a battery that has been let to go dry is PREVENTATIVE maintenance and in my opinion good advise. It's like replacing tires when the wear bars tell you to do so instead of waiting until loose control of the bike in a corner.
RobKEEP THE RUBBER SIDE DOWN
1978 XS1100E Modified
1978 XS500E
1979 XS1100F Restored
1980 XS1100 SG
1981 Suzuki GS1100
1983 Suzuki GS750S Katana
1983 Honda CB900 Custom
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Quote:
Yes any part can let you down at any time but running with parts that are known to be questionable is asking for trouble. Any mechanic can tell you that PREVENTATIVE maintenance is always cheaper then waiting until it breaks.
PREVENTATIVE maintenance is good practice. Replacing a battery that has been let to go dry is PREVENTATIVE maintenance and in my opinion good advise. It's like replacing tires when the wear bars tell you to do so instead of waiting until lose control of the bike in a corner.
Rob
Wow!
Spoken like a professional Rob.
In other words: don't be a cheap b@stard and it won't let you down.
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No, it's like replacing parts because you don't like the date they were made!
The tire bar analogy doesn't fit, because those bars are telling you your tires are wore out. What I am talking about is replacing stuff when you have no indication there is anything wrong with them.
I prefer to test them first, rather than assume. In this case, the battery will likely not even take a charge, then he will know he needs a new one.
If I filled it, charged it and it worked, held a charge, etc. I would use it until it wore out, just like any other battery.
I do preventative maintenance on critical parts like wheel bearings, brake pads (if I don't know the history), All fluids, and anything else that could kill me unexpectedly.
"Not one of those that keep the landfills full, and parts dealers smiling"Nice day, if it doesn't rain...
'05 ST1300
'83 502/502 Monte Carlo for sale/trade
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don't see anything resembling a fuse block
Located before battery, just under top of frame left side behind side cover. (Unless aready used should be a spare fuse in rubber block.
mro
BTW,
nothing works when main fuse blown.
No lights and won't crank.
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Battery
The problem with a battery that has been dry is that the sulfer on the plates seperates from the plates and drops to the bottom of the battery. Not only are the plates missing some of the chemicals they need to react, the sulfer can short across the plates at the bottom causing the battery to fail.
A sulfated battery will normally take a charge but has no residual charge. To test for this, hook up a voltmeter and turn on the ignition(don't start the engine). If the voltage drops quickly with just this minimal amperage charge, the battery is sulfated.Walt
80 XS11s - "Landshark"
79 XS11s
03 Valkyrie
80 XS Midnight Special - Freebee 1
78 Honda CB125C - Freebee 2
81 Suzuki 850L - Freebee 3
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Fuse holder
The fuse holder on my bike is easily accessed by removing the seat and lokking down on the left side just rear of the battery . It is in a rubber block mounted on the frame crossbar by a metal tang similiar to the one that holds the flasher.XJ1100K
Avon rubber
MikesXS black coils
Iridium plugs w/ 1k caps
MikesXS front master
Paragon SS brake lines (unlinked)
Loud Horns (Stebel/Fiamm)
Progressive fork springs
CIBIE headlight reflector
YICS Eliminator
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Originally posted by Crazcnuk
No, it's like replacing parts because you don't like the date they were made!
The tire bar analogy doesn't fit, because those bars are telling you your tires are wore out. What I am talking about is replacing stuff when you have no indication there is anything wrong with them.
I prefer to test them first, rather than assume. In this case, the battery will likely not even take a charge, then he will know he needs a new one.
If I filled it, charged it and it worked, held a charge, etc. I would use it until it wore out, just like any other battery.
I do preventative maintenance on critical parts like wheel bearings, brake pads (if I don't know the history), All fluids, and anything else that could kill me unexpectedly.
"Not one of those that keep the landfills full, and parts dealers smiling"
RobKEEP THE RUBBER SIDE DOWN
1978 XS1100E Modified
1978 XS500E
1979 XS1100F Restored
1980 XS1100 SG
1981 Suzuki GS1100
1983 Suzuki GS750S Katana
1983 Honda CB900 Custom
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