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Ducati Monster Forum
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Speaking of Rectifiers...
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Topic: Speaking of Rectifiers... (Read 5516 times)
SR1K_Femme
Full Member
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Posts: 147
TWINS Basil, TWINS!!
Speaking of Rectifiers...
«
on:
October 15, 2008, 07:06:15 AM »
So my buddy who has an S4R, had the pleasure of being stranded in the not so friendly outskirts of eastern Cali, when he lived there. Apparently the rectifier tends to get a might warm under the seat and fries itself. Has this problem been fixed, or should I be concerned. Alas I've had this happen to me with my CBR (and no they haven't updated, in the last 15years.
) And I REALLY don't want it to, on the Duc.
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"Why, so serious!?"
Mother
Guest
Re: Speaking of Rectifiers...
«
Reply #1 on:
October 15, 2008, 07:17:47 AM »
Quote from: SR1K_Femme on October 15, 2008, 07:06:15 AM
So my buddy who has an S4R, had the pleasure of being stranded in the not so friendly outskirts of eastern Cali, when he lived there. Apparently the rectifier tends to get a might warm under the seat and fries itself. Has this problem been fixed, or should I be concerned. Alas I've had this happen to me with my CBR (and no they haven't updated, in the last 15years.
) And I REALLY don't want it to, on the Duc.
I've always heard second and third hand about the under seat location of the rectifier being bad news
never seen one actually fail
TPO Parts makes a slick little kit to get it some air
radically over-priced if you even have rudimentory skills with a hacksaw and a drill motor
but the fit and finish more than make up for it IMO
Vic has one I think
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NEIKOS
Guest
Re: Speaking of Rectifiers...
«
Reply #2 on:
October 15, 2008, 07:28:36 AM »
I wouldn't say mine "failed" but the connectors did melt through - don't believe me you can ask Bible Boy, he helped me fix it.
It is now relocated.
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Visolara
Hero Member
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Posts: 626
Jacobs Love Meat
Re: Speaking of Rectifiers...
«
Reply #3 on:
October 15, 2008, 07:36:17 AM »
Quote from: NEIKOS on October 15, 2008, 07:28:36 AM
I wouldn't say mine "failed" but the connectors did melt through - don't believe me you can ask Bible Boy, he helped me fix it.
It is now
rectified
.
fixed it for ya.
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Maurice Miller
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NEIKOS
Guest
Re: Speaking of Rectifiers...
«
Reply #4 on:
October 15, 2008, 08:06:35 AM »
I so want to throw out a rectum joke but my little brain just can't make the connection . . .
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scott_araujo
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Posts: 1593
Re: Speaking of Rectifiers...
«
Reply #5 on:
October 15, 2008, 08:55:16 AM »
If you're not in the mood to go through relocation, getting more air, etc. you can just trace the wires from the rectifier down to the nearest juntion connectors. Clean the terminals and put some dielectric grease on them. This keeps them from corroding, keeps the electrical resistance down, and helps keep the temps down.
That said, under the seat with no airflow is a stupid spot to put something with cooling fins that tends to get hot.
Scott
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SR1K_Femme
Full Member
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Posts: 147
TWINS Basil, TWINS!!
Re: Speaking of Rectifiers...
«
Reply #6 on:
October 15, 2008, 09:51:04 AM »
Cooling fins, what?! We don't need no sticking air flow to make those actually WORK do we?!
I hear ya guys! Not sure I want to part with a bunch of money on my Duc for a 'relocation' kit, when I can buy 'cooler' things.
I'm thinking I'm going with Scott's idea for now. Hey Neikos, next time you ride or whatnot, can I check out your 'rectified' rectifier?
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"Why, so serious!?"
duc_fan
Hero Member
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Posts: 1599
Designated right-wing religious kook.
Re: Speaking of Rectifiers...
«
Reply #7 on:
October 15, 2008, 11:08:30 AM »
Effin' Ducatis and their bloody electrics.
Ducatis are like Ford when it comes to electrical stuff: crappy connectors and weak wiring.
+1 to what Scott said about thoroughly cleaning the connectors and coating them with dielectric compound. The connections on Chuck's bike had to be replaced because the OEM one had melted so badly the wires were coming loose (actually, one was completely disconnected when we got in there).
The headlight on my SS melted its connector last year. That's okay, it gets better... when I hit the high beam, it's not shutting off the low beam filament. I need to double-check the Ducati manual, but from what I understand of headlights, this ain't normal. Running both filaments draws too much power and gets the bulb too hot. So... the switch is probably bad. I'd just not use the high beam, except that riding down Stafford Rd at 11pm is pitch-fricken-dark, and the low beam just doesn't cut it.
Anyway, Sabrina, if the rectifier is under the seat I'd put it on the priority list to get it relocated, whether you do it yourself, have one (or more) of us do it, or buy the kit. Cleaning the connector is a stopgap measure. It helps, but it's probably not the long-term fix.
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"Science without religion is lame; religion without science is blind." -- Albert Einstein
"I want a peaceful soul. I need a bigger gun." -- Charlie Crews on Life
Street: 2000 Cagiva Gran Canyon
Track: 2005 Honda CBR 600RR - Salvage project
Sold: 2001 Ducati SS900ie - Gone, but not forgotten...
NEIKOS
Guest
Re: Speaking of Rectifiers...
«
Reply #8 on:
October 15, 2008, 11:09:39 AM »
Sure.
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scott_araujo
Hero Member
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Posts: 1593
Re: Speaking of Rectifiers...
«
Reply #9 on:
October 15, 2008, 03:28:11 PM »
Dan, yeah, only one filament on at a time. The exception is the passing trigger which flips on the high beam and does not dim the low beam.
Femme, you could also just cut off the connector and chuck it, solder the thin in place. I think LT Snyder recommedns this as a fix in his manual because of the crappy connectors. I like that guy's manual, he knows his doo-doo.
Scott
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NEIKOS
Guest
Re: Speaking of Rectifiers...
«
Reply #10 on:
October 15, 2008, 03:37:29 PM »
Quote from: scott_araujo on October 15, 2008, 03:28:11 PM
. . . just cut off the connector and
Chuck
it, solder the thin in place. I think LT Snyder recommedns this as a fix in his manual because of the
Hey now!
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krolik
Hero Member
Offline
Posts: 4247
Yeah, that's me. So what.
Re: Speaking of Rectifiers...
«
Reply #11 on:
October 15, 2008, 06:15:27 PM »
I have the TPO relocator, it's a nice piece, and it is easy to install.
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'03 M800 "not so dark" Dark, Remus high pipes, Cycle Cat clipons & frame sliders, CRG lanesplitter mirrors, Sargent seat, tail chop, Nichols flywheel, modified & powdercoated rearsets, 15/44 gearing, 520 chain & sprockets, TPO Beast pod filters, Power Comander III. 72.95 Rear Wheel HP & 54.29 ft-lbs!
Quote from: SacDuc
No. I'm a different type of idiot altogether.
SR1K_Femme
Full Member
Offline
Posts: 147
TWINS Basil, TWINS!!
Re: Speaking of Rectifiers...
«
Reply #12 on:
October 16, 2008, 06:52:37 AM »
How much is said TPO relocator? Or dare I ask!?
Damn electronics!! *puts fist in the air, shaking angrily*
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"Why, so serious!?"
ryandalling
Hero Member
Offline
Posts: 2331
Trade you my milk for your Ducati...
Re: Speaking of Rectifiers...
«
Reply #13 on:
October 16, 2008, 09:10:39 AM »
Jump starting your bike from a car (a running car) will fry your voltage rectifier/regulator too.
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Confused rider who doesn't know what he is even riding at the moment. (2012 URAL GearUp, 2012 Ninja 250 Racer, 1969 CB175 Racer)
SR1K_Femme
Full Member
Offline
Posts: 147
TWINS Basil, TWINS!!
Re: Speaking of Rectifiers...
«
Reply #14 on:
October 16, 2008, 09:50:50 AM »
Good thing I haven't tried that yet then eh?
Thanks for the heads up!
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"Why, so serious!?"
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