1 Odd question for the electrical gurus... Wed Sep 15, 2021 5:44 pm
Bikesmith
Silver member
Hey Friends,
I have a weird one for you. The electrical system on my 1985 K100RS is more or less stock. I did make one change, though: I connected the two leads for the altitude corrector plug to a switch, using the last remaining switch blank in the dashboard (After grip warmer and hazard lights). I even drew a tiny picture of mountains on the switch .
I've never had to turn the switch off, as the five years and 16,000 miles I've done with this bike have all been above 3000 feet.
Here's my question, though. If I do ever go below 3000 feet, should I turn the bike off to flip the switch or just do it on the fly? I've been looking at the wiring diagram and don't see any reason that flipping the switch while riding would hurt the bike in the slightest (I think it would need much more advanced electronics for that), but I'm not positive. So I thought I'd ask. Any thoughts?
Thanks!
-Jon
I have a weird one for you. The electrical system on my 1985 K100RS is more or less stock. I did make one change, though: I connected the two leads for the altitude corrector plug to a switch, using the last remaining switch blank in the dashboard (After grip warmer and hazard lights). I even drew a tiny picture of mountains on the switch .
I've never had to turn the switch off, as the five years and 16,000 miles I've done with this bike have all been above 3000 feet.
Here's my question, though. If I do ever go below 3000 feet, should I turn the bike off to flip the switch or just do it on the fly? I've been looking at the wiring diagram and don't see any reason that flipping the switch while riding would hurt the bike in the slightest (I think it would need much more advanced electronics for that), but I'm not positive. So I thought I'd ask. Any thoughts?
Thanks!
-Jon
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Jon
Mechanically competent, electrically perplexed
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1985 BMW K100RS
1959 BMW R60
1942 Chevrolet 3/4-ton Special
1940 Royal Enfield WD/CO
1975 Porsche 911S