Unexplained Battery Drain - '07 StreetGlide
#1
Unexplained Battery Drain - '07 StreetGlide
I'm taking care of my friends scoot while he's serving overseas. He's had an ongoing problem with battery drain.
Things we know:
-Power Commander installed
-Previous owner "disconnected" the alarm system after losing the keyfob
-Has some minor corrosion from time in FL
-Frequent rides do not help the problem!
-Cold not a factor where it's stored
Just recharged the battery and plan to throw a multimeter on it tonite to see what I get when the ignition is off and on, but not sure what readings I should get.
Any ideas folks?
Things we know:
-Power Commander installed
-Previous owner "disconnected" the alarm system after losing the keyfob
-Has some minor corrosion from time in FL
-Frequent rides do not help the problem!
-Cold not a factor where it's stored
Just recharged the battery and plan to throw a multimeter on it tonite to see what I get when the ignition is off and on, but not sure what readings I should get.
Any ideas folks?
#2
Heres what you do to narrow it down a bit. You will need an amp-meter, not sure if they are cheap, the one I have was expensive, maybe you can rent or borrow one?
Disconnect the negative cable, hook one lead from amp meter to negative post, one to negative cable and set meter in appropriate range if applicable. From there, you start pulling fuses until the reading on the meter goes back to almost zero. When you pull the fuse for the memory on the radio, you will get a slight drop. This does not find the problem, rather it narrows it down to which circuit the problem is on. Hope it helps.
Disconnect the negative cable, hook one lead from amp meter to negative post, one to negative cable and set meter in appropriate range if applicable. From there, you start pulling fuses until the reading on the meter goes back to almost zero. When you pull the fuse for the memory on the radio, you will get a slight drop. This does not find the problem, rather it narrows it down to which circuit the problem is on. Hope it helps.
#4
Heres what you do to narrow it down a bit. You will need an amp-meter, not sure if they are cheap, the one I have was expensive, maybe you can rent or borrow one?
Disconnect the negative cable, hook one lead from amp meter to negative post, one to negative cable and set meter in appropriate range if applicable. From there, you start pulling fuses until the reading on the meter goes back to almost zero. When you pull the fuse for the memory on the radio, you will get a slight drop. This does not find the problem, rather it narrows it down to which circuit the problem is on. Hope it helps.
Disconnect the negative cable, hook one lead from amp meter to negative post, one to negative cable and set meter in appropriate range if applicable. From there, you start pulling fuses until the reading on the meter goes back to almost zero. When you pull the fuse for the memory on the radio, you will get a slight drop. This does not find the problem, rather it narrows it down to which circuit the problem is on. Hope it helps.
Good point it may actually be the battery pooched. Get it checked out first.
#6
I'm taking care of my friends scoot while he's serving overseas. He's had an ongoing problem with battery drain.
Things we know:
-Power Commander installed
-Previous owner "disconnected" the alarm system after losing the keyfob
-Has some minor corrosion from time in FL
-Frequent rides do not help the problem!
-Cold not a factor where it's stored
Just recharged the battery and plan to throw a multimeter on it tonite to see what I get when the ignition is off and on, but not sure what readings I should get.
Any ideas folks?
Things we know:
-Power Commander installed
-Previous owner "disconnected" the alarm system after losing the keyfob
-Has some minor corrosion from time in FL
-Frequent rides do not help the problem!
-Cold not a factor where it's stored
Just recharged the battery and plan to throw a multimeter on it tonite to see what I get when the ignition is off and on, but not sure what readings I should get.
Any ideas folks?
#7
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#8
How long is it sitting without being run?
Are you putting an insulator under the kickstand(rubber, wood)?
You could disconnect the battery if it's sitting for long periods. Or a battery tender.
If it's draining daily even when getting rode often then you either need a battery, have a grounding issue, or it isn't getting charged(with it running you should be getting pretty close to 14 volts).
If there has been mods done then I would suspect a wire is skinned and grounding somewhere. Maybe under the tank or around the neck area, if internal wiring for the bars has been done this is a good area for a skinned wire also.
Good luck
Are you putting an insulator under the kickstand(rubber, wood)?
You could disconnect the battery if it's sitting for long periods. Or a battery tender.
If it's draining daily even when getting rode often then you either need a battery, have a grounding issue, or it isn't getting charged(with it running you should be getting pretty close to 14 volts).
If there has been mods done then I would suspect a wire is skinned and grounding somewhere. Maybe under the tank or around the neck area, if internal wiring for the bars has been done this is a good area for a skinned wire also.
Good luck
#9
As mentioned, a digital volt meter connected to the battery, and note the slow drop in voltage (At least two digits to the right of the decimal point). Pull fuses one at a time slowly, look for change in voltage drop. If the battery is in good condition, don't be surprised to see the volts go up a little when you find the drain issue.
This has worked for me on classic cars and such over the years, and should work for you.
I would start with the main (Maxi) fuse to show if the problem is "Upstream" or "Downstream" of it. This procedure should get you in the game.
This has worked for me on classic cars and such over the years, and should work for you.
I would start with the main (Maxi) fuse to show if the problem is "Upstream" or "Downstream" of it. This procedure should get you in the game.
#10