30 people read my other post so far. They must have all gone to sleep, because nobody answered the question I included on that post. Reposting here in hopes of gaining an answer.
The Yami grips are shown as two elements that are wired in series to the controller. Are all heated grips wired in series, or are some wired parallel?
It very definately matters if you wire them in series or in parallel.
You want to follow the instructions for the particular heated grip kit you are installing. If you wire a set in parallel when they were intended by the manufacturer to wire in series, then the grips will attempt to draw far too much current (amps). If you are missing the instructions then generally you can check the resistance in ohms of the grips, and determine by the value you measure. Be sure you set the test meter on Rx1 (the most sensitive scale) and that when you touch the two test leads together the meter reads 0.0
Example: Grips in the 7-10 ohms per grip are generally wired in parallel, i.e. 12 volts goes to each grip, and each grip gets grounded. If the grips are in the 2 - 4 ohm range, then they generally are wired in series. If you wire a set of grips that are 2 ohm each WRONG, then the grips will attempt to put out 400% of the manufacturer's intended wattage. If you wire a set of grips that are 9 ohms each WRONG, then they will put out only 25% of what the manufacturer intended.
The important Ohm's Law formula to keep in mind is volts squared divided by ohms equals watts. If you take two grips that are 9 ohms each and wire them in series, you have a total resistance of 18 ohms. Volts squared (144) divided by 18 ohms equals 8 and that number divided by two equals the 4 watts you will get from each grip. You will hardly feel the heat in such a case.
Now take the 2 ohm grip, and wire them incorrectly in Parallel and see what happens: Two 2 ohm grips wired in parallel, the kit will be effectively 1 ohm in total (because they are wired in parallel ) and volts squared (144) divided by ohms (1) equals 144 watts (for the pair) or 72 watts per grip. 72 watts is enough to melt the grips, so don't ignore the manufacturer's specific instructions, it really does make a difference.
For those who report it doesn't make a difference, something else is going on that is more complicated. If a set intended by the manufacturer to be wired in series is incorrectly wired in parallel, this is what happens: If they do not blow a fuse, or melt a wire, and report similar heat as when wired in series, then probably the voltage source was overloaded for that circuit to a point where there is a large voltage reduction, thus the resulting heat output is similar. But don't mess with it, follow the instructions, don't experiment or you could melt wires, cause a fire, or create other expensive electrical damage. 400% of the manufacturer's intended heat is definately trouble.
rokonjim