Any melted B&B stickers? Normal or I ran too hot?
#1
Any melted B&B stickers? Normal or I ran too hot?
I noticed halfway into my ride yesterday that I melted part of my B&B sticker. Anyone else do this? I don't recall anyone mentioning this happen before. Anything I should worry about?
I've got a temp gauge on it. Technically a cylinder head gauge, but it wouldn't fit. Per the manufacturers recommendation I put it under a nearby bolt. In this case a bolt on the front of the head. It's called the reed valve assembly.
Anyway, I get consistent temps from it and yesterday it maxed out higher than normal. For normal riding it sits around 100C (212F) give or take. Harder riding, under load...max around 116C (240C). This time it maxed out at 126C (259F). It was a hot day as usual here.
Radiator fan was working. When it kicked in, the temps went down significantly. Oil level is good. Not sure what else to check.
I don't think anything is wrong though. I'm guessing my weight (245lb) and all my gear (another 30-40lbs) plus slow steady (and often steep) climbs up a mountain is just a lot for the engine...especially with little airflow.
Been wanting to put a switch on the fan so I can keep it going constantly on these climbs. It doesn't freeze here. I might try distilled water and water wetter as well.
Anyone else melt your sticker?
I've got a temp gauge on it. Technically a cylinder head gauge, but it wouldn't fit. Per the manufacturers recommendation I put it under a nearby bolt. In this case a bolt on the front of the head. It's called the reed valve assembly.
Anyway, I get consistent temps from it and yesterday it maxed out higher than normal. For normal riding it sits around 100C (212F) give or take. Harder riding, under load...max around 116C (240C). This time it maxed out at 126C (259F). It was a hot day as usual here.
Radiator fan was working. When it kicked in, the temps went down significantly. Oil level is good. Not sure what else to check.
I don't think anything is wrong though. I'm guessing my weight (245lb) and all my gear (another 30-40lbs) plus slow steady (and often steep) climbs up a mountain is just a lot for the engine...especially with little airflow.
Been wanting to put a switch on the fan so I can keep it going constantly on these climbs. It doesn't freeze here. I might try distilled water and water wetter as well.
Anyone else melt your sticker?
#3
My sticker fell off.. at least the silver part did. But I weigh in right around you and mine runs hot too.
I found a company that makes a plug and play manual on /off switch(it's called a coolair manual radiator fan) that is OEM plug and play. And I'm adding a trail tech in line rad house temp sensor.
I found a company that makes a plug and play manual on /off switch(it's called a coolair manual radiator fan) that is OEM plug and play. And I'm adding a trail tech in line rad house temp sensor.
#4
Last edited by Werloc; 10-19-2016 at 01:43 AM.
#5
#6
My sticker fell off.. at least the silver part did. But I weigh in right around you and mine runs hot too.
I found a company that makes a plug and play manual on /off switch(it's called a coolair manual radiator fan) that is OEM plug and play. And I'm adding a trail tech in line rad house temp sensor.
I found a company that makes a plug and play manual on /off switch(it's called a coolair manual radiator fan) that is OEM plug and play. And I'm adding a trail tech in line rad house temp sensor.
#7
You're right. I've been putting it off too long. Just dug into the wiring schematics of the bike and think I've figured out a decent way to wire it. Time to bust out the soldering iron
#9
You'll find a wiring diagram in my post in the FAQs (link in sig line).
#10
Yeah, I was referencing that, but my wiring appears a bit different...or I'm missing something.
(Going backwards here)
Fan wiring goes to ground and to fan relay. Fan relay goes to ECU. ECU goes to temp gauge. Then temp gauge back to ECU. (Both wires from temp gauge go to ECU)
I can't figure out which wire from the temp gauge to the ECU would be the right one to splice. No indication in the wiring schematics what each wire is for.
So my thinking is to cut the positive wire right before the fan and wire the switch in there. Switch it to one side and it's getting juice direct from the battery, and original wire (from ECU) is off. Switch it to the other side and everything runs as normal (temp gauge controls the fan).
It'll be a little messy with the extra wires, but should work.
(Going backwards here)
Fan wiring goes to ground and to fan relay. Fan relay goes to ECU. ECU goes to temp gauge. Then temp gauge back to ECU. (Both wires from temp gauge go to ECU)
I can't figure out which wire from the temp gauge to the ECU would be the right one to splice. No indication in the wiring schematics what each wire is for.
So my thinking is to cut the positive wire right before the fan and wire the switch in there. Switch it to one side and it's getting juice direct from the battery, and original wire (from ECU) is off. Switch it to the other side and everything runs as normal (temp gauge controls the fan).
It'll be a little messy with the extra wires, but should work.