Any metallurgist in the house?
Any metallurgist in the house?
Today I noticed one of my bikes spotlights was not working . Taking the assembly apart I found one of the wires was broken. As you can see I soldered the solid wire to the U connector so I thought I was doing it right. The broken wire comes of the green lead so I'm wondering if that is the positive side. Do any of you have any conjectures as to why the wire broke? To much amps and the wire became brittle?
Oh and in case you are wondering I removed the red plastic covering for visual clarity. Also the grid lines are 1/4" x 1/4".
Oh and in case you are wondering I removed the red plastic covering for visual clarity. Also the grid lines are 1/4" x 1/4".
- Will Robinson
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Nice macro shot.
Green doesn't necessarily mean ground in automobile wiring nor on the Harley Davidson (not sure about Japanese bikes).
As Grendel said, use stranded wire not solid.
Usually the ground wire goes to the frame pretty close to the load to avoid having to run a second wire when the metal frame is already right there. An exception might be if your light is attached to rubber mounted handlebars which would keep the whole assembly from getting grounded to the frame. In that case they would run a dedicated ground.
Green doesn't necessarily mean ground in automobile wiring nor on the Harley Davidson (not sure about Japanese bikes).
As Grendel said, use stranded wire not solid.
Usually the ground wire goes to the frame pretty close to the load to avoid having to run a second wire when the metal frame is already right there. An exception might be if your light is attached to rubber mounted handlebars which would keep the whole assembly from getting grounded to the frame. In that case they would run a dedicated ground.
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That might explain it. Anyways, like Will & Grendel said, stranded wire should fix it. Its also alot easier to solder should it become seperated.woodchip wrote:Maybe when I used the wire strippers I used too small a diameter cutting hole?
At any rate it sure is nice having a digi camera that I can post pics for clarification.