re: Royal Enfield Electra: 1,22,000 kms & 18 years Quote:
Originally Posted by ashwinprakas If you do not have any sentimental attachments to the wiring harness you could simply replace it.
That is what I'd personally do, after all 1.2L is more than enough life for the electricals as far as my concerns go, heck even 50k is fine for me.
But yes, troubleshooting it would better equip you for any such concerns in the future.
Cheers,
A.P. | Quote:
Originally Posted by adrian Now this is interesting. Let's assume that the spark or voltage required for the spark plug to function, that was not generated at cranking speeds produced by operating the kicker was generated when the motorcycle was let loose on an incline. So what would be the culprit here ? Having a weird problem in your hand, I think you would be better off with a wiring circuit diagram, a good multi meter and lots of patience. I am subscribed to your thread to see how this solves. |
I think I may have fixed it, but will need few days to confirm as the issue was intermittent except that in the last couple of weeks the frequency had increased.
I opened the clutch case and everything looked fine at first glance. My eyes were on a coupler which was connected to a small black box behind the stator. I am not sure what the black box is. The plastic coupler wasn't locked and couldn't be either as the part that goes into the female side was missing that tiny piece which locks it. To check if that was the culprit, I started the bike, which started fine today, and tried unplugging it. It didn't uncouple easily and when it did, the engine turned off. Plugged it back in and it fired fine when I kicked. Still wasn't convinced that was coming loose at times preventing the bike from starting.
Next, I removed the stator to check if anything was loose behind and there was another green wire on the front which seemed to be attached by just few strands of wire. There was a red and green one which was attached to this one coil and was coated with a gel which was rubbery. I had a feeling that green wire was going to pop out soon and it did when I was screwing the stator back. I pushed it back into the gel and fired the bike and it did, when pulled out, it didn't. Atleast now I knew these wires were required for ignition. Hoping that the gel would hold that wire in place as I pushed it in and checked if it will come off easily, and after few more checks by firing the engine, I put the case back and oil and fired the bike and it was dead..
Took my lunch break and came back after an hour and tried again thinking that was not the issue and it may fire up now, it still didn't. Looked like the oil splashing had made it come off.
Opened up everything again and that wire seemed to be not sitting properly in that gel. So I removed the gel at that point to see how it is connected and it looked like it was soldered. Got my soldering rod and soldered it back to place. Engine fired up.
Before I put the case and poured the oil, checked many times by turning off the ignition and firing it and it did everytime. Put everything back and took it for a short spin and revved it so to check if turns off because of the vibrations. So far so good.
My assumption if this was the issue, is that the wire was hanging on by just few strands and wasn't passing enough current. By slipping the clutch on a slope, it produced enough current to fire. I am not sure what the gel does or if it just protection against the oil. But what I couldn't figure out was why it always started fine in the morning after the issue occurs, but not after a run and parking it for an hour or more. I guess the oil heat plays a role on that gel which then affected the loose connection.
Anyway fingers crossed and hopefully it was a Sunday well spent. If this was not the issue and it happens again, wiring replacement it will be.
Now the bike has to regain my trust to start using it to know if the issue is fixed it not.
Before and after soldering.
Last edited by tharian : 9th February 2020 at 20:36.
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