I had been welding races out for years...until I recently had to remove almost new bearings...so bought this tool.
It works great. It does grab almost nothing....and does it well. These Ed Korn tools are ingenious....and perfect for an amateur.
I had been welding races out for years...until I recently had to remove almost new bearings...so bought this tool.
Mine is a 1975 (12/74) and had no ground wires when I got it. I doubt the PO removed them, as the "hot" wires were still in place in the bent (for fairing clearance) turn signal stalks. I was dubious as to the chassis as ground through the head bearings, as like Chuey, I have had ground issues with bicycle generator light sets when the ground had to pass through the head bearings. But when I reassembled the fork I checked continuity at each step and only had issues with TS stalk to TS pods, and that was quickly resolved by removing some powdercoat where the pods clamp down.Rob Frankham wrote:Hi Chuey,Chuey wrote:
On my bikes the turn signals have two wires each. Isn't one of those wires a "ground" wire? I think they trace back into the headlight bucket so I would have thought they were ground.
Chuey
Depends on the age of the bike... and to a certain extent, the whim of Uncle Hans... According to the diagrams, the 73/74 yesr /6s don't have ground wires to the front indicators but the 75/76 years do. From experience, however, my R60/6 is a '76 bike and which did not have them when I got it. Either something has been changed by a PO or it was never fitted with htem... I suspect the latter. Wouldn't be the first time that BMW wiring diagrams have existed in a different version of reality to the real world. Either way, the bike has ground wires now.
Rob
Sounds a good theory... except that my '76 with plastic housings didn't have them...George Ryals wrote:I think that the bikes with metal turn signal housings(up through '74 I think) had no ground wire since the circuit was completed through the housing and metal stalk to the bike. The later plastic turn signal housings require ground wires to complete the light circuit back to the bike.
Basic welding is not difficult at all.Roy Gavin wrote: I have never considered buying a cheap arc welder, or idiot stick as my dad called them - I can bodge enough stuff up as it is without adding another tool to the armory.
How did they work, Rob? Was the socket grounding through the bolt?Rob Frankham wrote:Sounds a good theory... except that my '76 with plastic housings didn't have them...George Ryals wrote:I think that the bikes with metal turn signal housings(up through '74 I think) had no ground wire since the circuit was completed through the housing and metal stalk to the bike. The later plastic turn signal housings require ground wires to complete the light circuit back to the bike.
Go figure...
Rob