Showing posts with label headlight. Show all posts
Showing posts with label headlight. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 3, 2015

Thirteen Thousand Three Hundred Miles

I'm still riding, despite the cold and the salt on the road. I'm not happy to be subjecting Ruby to these conditions - but I am happy to be rolling. In fact, today (Tuesday January 3rd 2015) marked the passing of 13,300 miles beneath her wheels under my stewardship.

37900 and tatty in August 2010
50893 and shiny in February 2015
 That's right: I bought Ruby with 37830 miles on the clock, 37900 showing when I pulled up on my drive for the first time. When I got home today, her odometer read 50900. It amazes me - I still think of her as my new bike. OK, it is 4 years and 6 months since the hot August day I rode her home to Somerset. So Ted Simon wouldn't be impressed. But, as I say, it just doesn't feel that long to me. And anyway, I spent two years taking her apart and putting her back together immediately after draining the oil on that August day in 2010. Maybe it's my age. I just don't notice time passing so much any more.




I do notice how the riding experience varies from day to day and, believe it or not, even in Winter it can be exhilarating. Today was such a day. There are times when I think, third gear just feels great, rolling the power on and off with a seamless thrust, the exhaust note rumbling and cracking off of winter walls and echoing through leafless woods.

October 2014 - Summer's gone, rubbish weather in the offing

Washed down and treated with Scottoil FS365
I refitted the fairing lowers and higher screen with the advent of colder weather. I'm enjoying them. I like choice. Ruby gives me choice.

Some time ago, I also fitted an additional light between the horns, in front of the radiator. This was after I had low beam blow for the second time and struggled to avoid dazzling other motorists with my main beam. I have the extra light switched independently through a relay when the low-beam circuit is on. It is mounted on an aluminium gantry between the existing horn lugs on the upper fairing subframe. It is clamped between the horns and those lugs. The light should really be mounted an inch or two further forward to get best value from its beam. I have used it several times though on particularly horrible nights.
Measuring up a piece of angled aluminium
with horns and additional light

Trying the light in the centre of my aluminium gantry

Horns in place at each end, light bracket in the centre

Light in place - it needs to be further forward
but does the job

Thursday, October 4, 2012

How dim - H4 pin wiring

The headlight on the early Trophys has a poor reputation for the strength of its low beam. I decided to see if I could improve it in two ways. First and most importantly, to ensure there was a good power to the bulb. Secondly, to fit a xenon bulb because the light they produce is closer to daylight colour than standard halogen bulbs.
A good power feed means making sure the wiring delivers a real 12 volts at the bulb terminals. It also means having a reliable earth. The early Trophy has a single halogen H4 headlight that takes its power via the right-hand switch cluster. Daytonas have twin H4s that take their power via relays from a separate feed. There is a chance that the circuitous route taken by the power might mean a voltage drop. I checked the voltage at the terminals and it was around 10.5 volts whereas the battery was showing a clear 12.4 volts across its terminals. A bit of a drop is normal - this is too much so I was sure I needed to do something about it.
Headlight block connector on main loom, with separate heavy guage switched live
A close look at the loom wiring to the headlight block connector suggested to me that the wire was a bit on the thin side. The picture above shows four wires in the connector: brown-white is the feed for the side light, red-black for the high-beam, red-yellow for low beam, and black-yellow for earth. The thinner the wire, the higher the resistance and hence the higher the voltage drop. The comparison of the separate feed (white wire) made this difference particularly noticeable.
The headlight connects to the loom via a small harness. Rather strangely, in my view, the colour coding in this little harness is completely different to the scheme for the main loom. Its four wires were blue for earth, yellow for side light, black for high beam and white for low beam. On the plus side, the wires themselves were quite a bit thicker than those in the main loom.
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Having loosely fitted the cockpit fairing, I could see there was sufficient space to fit some relays in the same way as the Daytona headlight. I could make sure the horns also benefitted from max voltage at the same time by feeding them from a relay. The horns work by earthing through the horn switch in the left-hand switch gear. I'd fitted car horns which draw more current than the original bike horns, for the benefit of being REALLY LOUD. I discovered that they worked perfectly well individually, but would not produce a note when both were wired on. I think they were giving the horn switch a very hard time. I could use the heavy gauge feed for all three relays. So that's what I did.
Headlight wires extracted from H4 connector
I extracted the terminals from the H4 and loom block connectors and cut the wires ready for splicing in new wires to lead from the loom to the relay switch terminals, and from the relay power feed back to the headlight. I had some wires of near the right colours in my spares box.
terminals soldered to new wires Headlight wires after shrink wrapping
After soldering and insulating with heat-shrinking tube, I coated the terminals in petroleum jelly and refitted them into the block connector.
Coating electrical connectors in petroleum jelly Reassembling headlight block connector
Making up the power feed and earth was straight forward, using new insulated female crimp spade connectors. I tinned the ends of the wires first to help seal out moisture and get a firmer connection with the wire crimpers. For the power feed, I used thick brown wire with a male bullet on one end to couple with the white feed, and soldered in three branches to it as feeds for the three relays (horn, high beam and low beam). For the earth, I made up a similar wire with two branches. I made up a new frame earth because I wasn't sure the gauge of the earth in the block connector was adequate for the load. The picture below shows how it all came together:
Block connector with feed and earth wires
At my MOT, the tester pointed out that my dip beam was very yellow compared to the main beam. I'd installed a xenon H4 bulb, which should have a blue tinge to it so something wasn't right. He suggested I check to make sure that the bulb was earthed on the correct pin. The rear of an H4 bulb has its three terminals (high-beam feed, low-beam feed, and earth) arranged in a horse shoe. The earth should be on the left terminal, low-beam at the top terminal, and high-beam terminal on the right. Sure enough, when I checked I'd messed up the earth position in the H4 connector. Still, I knew my way around the wiring by then so released the black and white wires, swapped them over and all was good.
DSC05561
Relays in place in the cockpit fairing, wiring ready for coupling to main harness






Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Off to the MOT

For readers outside of the UK, the MOT is a mandatory annual test that all motor vehicles must pass if they are to be used on public roads. MOT stands for Ministry Of Transport. My bike had been off the road and without the need on an MOT for two years so, before I could allow her to roam free once more on British roads, I had to get her to my wonderful local MOT tester.

Although of course I had repaired, refurbished and/or refitted pretty well all of the running gear, I rechecked everything I could think of and road the bike backwards and forwards on my little drive. So the night before my MOT appointment, I ran the bike through at set of checks I've got used to performing in advance of the annual exam. I couldn't find any obvious problems but knew the headlight wasn't working as well as it should. I'd spotted that the wiring from the main loom was thin compared to the little harness that connects from the loom to the H4 headlight bulb.

The feel of the motor was just superb in these little tests. I had expected it to be running unevenly because I had reset the carburettors in cleaning them and so thought they'd be out of balance. As it happens, my attempt to get the carbs somewhere near by visually adjusting the DV carb throttle plates so they were all opening at about the same time with the throttle. The whole feel of the bike was just fantastic. I'm sorry that this is such an emotional and uninformative term to use. It's just that, for me, it was everything and more than I had hoped for. It's true, the gear selection felt a bit harsh - a real clunk - but I was used to this from my Daytona 900 when that motor was younger. The sense I had, just allowing the motor to pull the bike along at walking pace, was that it was willing and turbine smooth. No juddering, hesitation or shaking: just an even solid thrust.
This is how she sounded and ran at that particular moment:

You will see that the digital oil pressure and oil temperature gauges appear to be working correctly. They are powered from a spare coil positive wire courtesy of the fact that the loom was common right across the whole range in 1991 (the four-cylinder engines need two, the three-cylinder engines use three coils). So when I change the engine kill switch from off to on, the gauges are powered up and flash all segments of their LED display in the process. The then start to read oil temperature (right-hand gauge) and oil pressure (left-hand gauge). I discovered that the lowest temperature that the temp gauge can show is 25 degrees centigrade. So when it shows 25, it doesn't mean anything at all. The fact that it starts up in the 40's in this video is because the motor was warm from the first startup. The striking thing for me about the oil pressure is how high it reads when the engine is cold. Cold oil must be a lot thicker than oil at the correct operating temperature. I shall write more on this in a later posting. I had decided not to refit the fairing panels until I was confident that everything that would be hidden by them was working properly and leak-free. Rear fairing panels refitted, front panels off for shakedown test

Setting off for the MOT next day threw up my first problem: she was only running on two. I couldn't believe it after the 'pre-flight checks' the previous evening. Oh well. I had an appointment to keep so set up in lumpy fashion for the test. 

I have got to know the MOT tester at my local bike shop over several years. I never ask for any special consideration, though probably get it. I like the guy very much because he really knows what he is doing, is friendly and considerate and won't cut corners on the test. He found two problems with the bike. One was not unexpected: the headlight beam was out of adjustment. The other was that the electrical cables from the right-hand switch gear were catching as the handlebars turned from lock to lock. He allowed me to adjust the former and solve the latter with a cable tie. Everything else was in order and he complemented me on the cleanliness of the underside of my engine.
What a guy!
He said he thought there was a mistake in the wiring of my H4 bulb because the dip beam was very yellow in colour. He said this can happen if the wrong H4 terminal is earthed. So that needs checking. The dip beam on early Trophys is notoriously poor anyway and I had decided I'd address the fact that the main loom appears to have under sized feeds for the headlight anyway.
The nett result is one 1991 Triumph Trophy 1200 back on the road in Britain, 21 years after it first left the Hinckley factory. A great result for me.
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After the MOT Just back from the MOT test station 

We exchanged some thoughts on the rough running engine formed a plan to sort it out.