Putting a cycle electric generator on the chief. Fuse the positive or negative? thanks
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Originally posted by 47chief View PostPutting a cycle electric generator on the chief. Fuse the positive or negative? thanksPisten Bully is Harry Roberts in Vermont.
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As a rule, "always fuse the hot wire," (+) given a choice. That way in case of ground or overheat, the fuse burns out first, not the item overheating.
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Originally posted by pisten-bully View PostI wondered the same thing and found divergent opinions on the matter!
Originally posted by Sargehere View PostAs a rule, "always fuse the hot wire," (+) given a choice. That way in case of ground or overheat, the fuse burns out first, not the item overheating.
As far as the electrons are concerned, whose opinion on this is the only thing that matters, both wires are equally "hot." The same current always flows into a battery as out of it so if there is a malfunction anywhere on the bike that causes too much current to flow the fuse would blow whether it's in the '+' or '-' lead.
As a relevant aside, we universally call the battery lead connected to the frame "ground" (or "earth"), but this is a misnomer. Household and industrial wiring do have 'ground' wires that run to the actual Earth, i.e. the dirt outside the building, so that if there is a malfunction of, say, a washing machine the outer housing can't get to 110 Volts. However, absent a short in the rest of the wiring those 'ground' wires carry no current and the circuits would work just as well without them. Emphasizing this, "ground fault interrupters" (GFI) are in wall sockets in places like bathrooms of relatively new houses. These trigger circuit breakers if they detect even a tiny flow in the 'ground' wire.
Anyway, in a DC circuit like on a motorcycle there is no ground/earth despite our common (mis)use of the term. Both the '+' and '-' sides of the battery are equally important so a fuse can go in either wire. Remember, British motorcycles commonly used a positive earth/ground which functions just as well as the negative ground that is common on American machines.
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If the fuse is on neg battery post and blows while running,does the generator stop putting current into a overloaded or shorted circuit ?
If its on the pos does the generator continue to generate ?Any difference in this scenario?
Interesting that the factory used no fuse.
Thanks
Tom
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Originally posted by BoschZEV View PostPlease post a wiring diagram and we can discuss it.
Whoops! Looks like the folks in Springfield called negative "ground"Last edited by pisten-bully; 05-06-2016, 03:31 PM.Pisten Bully is Harry Roberts in Vermont.
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Originally posted by pisten-bully View PostWhoops! Looks like the folks in Springfield called negative "ground"
The first thing I can say is everyone who owns an Indian should complain to the factory for supplying such a lousy wiring diagram. No wonder there is confusion. Nowhere are the "ground" connections shown other than the one from the '-' terminal of the battery. I've drawn the two relevant ground connections in red on the attached diagram:
Indian_wiring.jpg
The "ground" wire from the '-' terminal of the battery goes to the frame, and the housing of the generator is attached to the frame providing that essential connection as well. Electrons are given 6V potential by the generator and flow through the black wire output from it through various switches and ammeters to finally reach the '+' terminal of the battery. This process would come to an instantaneous halt unless those electrons emerged from the '-' terminal of the battery, through the frame, and back into the generator through its housing (which I represented in this attachment as if it were a wire). This means if a fuse were in either the wire attached to the '+' terminal of the battery or the '-' terminal, either way the generator would cease to do anything useful if the fuse blew.
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Originally posted by BoschZEV View PostLucas did the equivalent in their wiring diagrams, calling the positive "earth" (but, later British bikes came with a different polarity, so in those they called the negative "earth").
The first thing I can say is everyone who owns an Indian should complain to the factory for supplying such a lousy wiring diagram. No wonder there is confusion. Nowhere are the "ground" connections shown other than the one from the '-' terminal of the battery. I've drawn the two relevant ground connections in red on the attached diagram:
[ATTACH=CONFIG]17423[/ATTACH]
The "ground" wire from the '-' terminal of the battery goes to the frame, and the housing of the generator is attached to the frame providing that essential connection as well. Electrons are given 6V potential by the generator and flow through the black wire output from it through various switches and ammeters to finally reach the '+' terminal of the battery. This process would come to an instantaneous halt unless those electrons emerged from the '-' terminal of the battery, through the frame, and back into the generator through its housing (which I represented in this attachment as if it were a wire). This means if a fuse were in either the wire attached to the '+' terminal of the battery or the '-' terminal, either way the generator would cease to do anything useful if the fuse blew.
Tom
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