LS1Bandit
Nautiboy
I was going to ask this in the thread on the dead battery where it was mentioned, but decided not to pollute that thread.
Can someone with a firm understanding of the electrical/electronics behind this recommendation explain it to me? Note, when gauging the level of explanation I'm an electrical engineer.
I've heard this advice over-and-over and quite frankly it befuddles me, and the only explanations I ever hear are "look at the power requirements of a car, look at the power requirements of a bike, do the math." And similar generalities.
My first and primary point is that car alternators are constant-voltage, not constant current. Meaning they're not going to "force" power into a load. When a load is put on that lowers the voltage, it will increase the amps delivered until it reaches the proper voltage. No load - no amps (for the most part).
My second point is that the internal resistance of a modern motorcycle battery, especially one that is depleted, is so low that most "excess" power will go directly into the battery, not in the systems it's connected to.
My third point is that a car battery can deliver *significantly* more amps than a car alternator can, so saying that it's OK to hook up a car battery as long as the car is off really doesn't make sense to me. If "excess amps" were the problem, simply hooking up the car battery would be the big issue, not having the car running.
My fourth point is that what's often pointed as the weak spot on the bike is the regulator/rectifier. However, as the name implies, the job of that device is to rectify the a/c current from the generator/stator and bleed off excess power from the generator. I suppose that's where the idea that this is the most likely to have problems comes from (bleeding off excess power), but the r/r is "upstream" of the battery and has diodes on it - it's not going to bleed power that's coming from the "battery side" only from the generator side.
Now if the *voltages* were different between a car and a motorcycle - that could be a problem. But every car I know of runs the same voltage levels (aside from hybrids and electrics) that a bike does.
So can someone help me out here? Am I just missing something? Or is this just advice based on loose generalizations/ideas ("car alternator big - motorcycle small - bad").
Can someone with a firm understanding of the electrical/electronics behind this recommendation explain it to me? Note, when gauging the level of explanation I'm an electrical engineer.
I've heard this advice over-and-over and quite frankly it befuddles me, and the only explanations I ever hear are "look at the power requirements of a car, look at the power requirements of a bike, do the math." And similar generalities.
My first and primary point is that car alternators are constant-voltage, not constant current. Meaning they're not going to "force" power into a load. When a load is put on that lowers the voltage, it will increase the amps delivered until it reaches the proper voltage. No load - no amps (for the most part).
My second point is that the internal resistance of a modern motorcycle battery, especially one that is depleted, is so low that most "excess" power will go directly into the battery, not in the systems it's connected to.
My third point is that a car battery can deliver *significantly* more amps than a car alternator can, so saying that it's OK to hook up a car battery as long as the car is off really doesn't make sense to me. If "excess amps" were the problem, simply hooking up the car battery would be the big issue, not having the car running.
My fourth point is that what's often pointed as the weak spot on the bike is the regulator/rectifier. However, as the name implies, the job of that device is to rectify the a/c current from the generator/stator and bleed off excess power from the generator. I suppose that's where the idea that this is the most likely to have problems comes from (bleeding off excess power), but the r/r is "upstream" of the battery and has diodes on it - it's not going to bleed power that's coming from the "battery side" only from the generator side.
Now if the *voltages* were different between a car and a motorcycle - that could be a problem. But every car I know of runs the same voltage levels (aside from hybrids and electrics) that a bike does.
So can someone help me out here? Am I just missing something? Or is this just advice based on loose generalizations/ideas ("car alternator big - motorcycle small - bad").

if u actually are responding to me, the username reflects mustang, not stan.
