Hello!
I ride my FJR as a support vehicle for bicycle charity fundraising, such as the BP MS 150 - https://main.nationalmssociety.org/site/TR/Bike/TXHBikeEvents?pg=entry&fr_id=28263 - this weekend (13,000 bicyclists, which will raise about $16million for MS research).
Forgive my lateness in posting my plans for others to review.
The basic idea is to replace my rear seat with an auxiliary battery, fuse box for/to blinky lights, and a mobile ham radio setup.
Wiring will be battery to battery with 40A inline fuses close to each positive terminal. In addition, there will be a switch between the fuse and the auxiliary battery as my choice of battery isolation. When I stop, I turn off the connection. After I start, I turn it back on. I have a better solution - https://www.discovercircuits.com/H-Corner/bat-iso.htm - but it needs a PCB designed and two built....
Positive on the auxiliary battery runs to 1) a switch and then a fuse box for the four blinky lights (3A each); and 2) a switch, an inline fuse, and then a Kenwood TM-V71A (3A listening, 13A broadcasting at full power).
My main battery is a Shorai LFX/Lithium. It is a different chemistry from the consumer batteries in phones and 18650s and such. Since the voltage parameters are different than lead-acid, I bought another as the auxiliary. Because they run higher voltages than lead-acid, I couldn't use a standard battery isolation setup. The auxiliary battery states it can take 7A during charging and is equivalent to a 7Ah lead-acid battery.
So during riding, I'll be running the blinky lights and listening to the radio (through Bluetooth powered by the radio) with everything connected. When I stop to help a bicyclist, I will be cutting the connection between the primary and auxiliary and turning off the bike. When I'm not on the route, I'll be turning off the blinky lights and maybe the radio.
Is this basically sound? The repair manager at my local Yamaha shop never has anything good to say about any deviation from original parts, so I'm not sure I can trust his recommendation (don't do the radio at all, the blinky lights are probably ok, the battery chemistry is seriously problematic, and pull fuses rather than wiring a switch).
Thank you for your time and assistance!
I ride my FJR as a support vehicle for bicycle charity fundraising, such as the BP MS 150 - https://main.nationalmssociety.org/site/TR/Bike/TXHBikeEvents?pg=entry&fr_id=28263 - this weekend (13,000 bicyclists, which will raise about $16million for MS research).
Forgive my lateness in posting my plans for others to review.
The basic idea is to replace my rear seat with an auxiliary battery, fuse box for/to blinky lights, and a mobile ham radio setup.
Wiring will be battery to battery with 40A inline fuses close to each positive terminal. In addition, there will be a switch between the fuse and the auxiliary battery as my choice of battery isolation. When I stop, I turn off the connection. After I start, I turn it back on. I have a better solution - https://www.discovercircuits.com/H-Corner/bat-iso.htm - but it needs a PCB designed and two built....
Positive on the auxiliary battery runs to 1) a switch and then a fuse box for the four blinky lights (3A each); and 2) a switch, an inline fuse, and then a Kenwood TM-V71A (3A listening, 13A broadcasting at full power).
My main battery is a Shorai LFX/Lithium. It is a different chemistry from the consumer batteries in phones and 18650s and such. Since the voltage parameters are different than lead-acid, I bought another as the auxiliary. Because they run higher voltages than lead-acid, I couldn't use a standard battery isolation setup. The auxiliary battery states it can take 7A during charging and is equivalent to a 7Ah lead-acid battery.
So during riding, I'll be running the blinky lights and listening to the radio (through Bluetooth powered by the radio) with everything connected. When I stop to help a bicyclist, I will be cutting the connection between the primary and auxiliary and turning off the bike. When I'm not on the route, I'll be turning off the blinky lights and maybe the radio.
Is this basically sound? The repair manager at my local Yamaha shop never has anything good to say about any deviation from original parts, so I'm not sure I can trust his recommendation (don't do the radio at all, the blinky lights are probably ok, the battery chemistry is seriously problematic, and pull fuses rather than wiring a switch).
Thank you for your time and assistance!