Mel46 wrote:Here is a way to always know which is hot and which is ground...if the wires are red and black...I used this in aircraft electrical school to remember.
Red is always "positively red hot".
And if they're both black, you have a 50-50 chance of creating a puff of Magic Smoke!
I found something to put here. Add yourself to the PCX-Forza Owner's Map! Go here: https://drive.google.com/open?id=1ULV6Ib-uKsjMpWaPzPwAXmfB7vU&usp=sharing
For instructions how to add yourself go here: http://www.hondapcx.org/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=6437#p88888 Be sure to add your Model, year, color, and name if your scoot has one!
If they are both black someone screwed up! Could you imagine if every single wire in the PCX was black?! The only way to know whether you got the correct one was to watch for the smoke! Poof!! Poof!! Poof!! OK! Wow, that was easy!
Currently own:
Red 2013 Honda PCX150 Givi tall windshield & tailbox - Lots of extra lights Custom seat from Thailand - Bad Boy Airhorn Takegawa Lowering Shocks - Michelin City Grip Tires Headlight assy upgraded to LEDs w/HS5 main bulbs NCY variator, drive face, and rollers
I found something to put here. Add yourself to the PCX-Forza Owner's Map! Go here: https://drive.google.com/open?id=1ULV6Ib-uKsjMpWaPzPwAXmfB7vU&usp=sharing
For instructions how to add yourself go here: http://www.hondapcx.org/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=6437#p88888 Be sure to add your Model, year, color, and name if your scoot has one!
Mel46 wrote:If they are both black someone screwed up! Could you imagine if every single wire in the PCX was black?! The only way to know whether you got the correct one was to watch for the smoke! Poof!! Poof!! Poof!! OK! Wow, that was easy!
Try working on a Harley...lots and lots of black wires. It gets a bit crazy.
Paul Smith
scootinfool.blogspot.com
Scootin' Fool on YouTube
Lancaster County Pennsylvania
2013 Honda PCX-150 (Angry Hornet) - Leo Vince Corsa Exhaust, NCY Variator (13g Rollers), NCY shocks, Givi D322S windscreen, NCY drum brake actuator arm, Denali Soundbomb mini horn
2006 Piaggio Beverly 250 (Rosa)
Ishkabibble wrote:Both of the wires on the power supply were black.
Hence my comment.
This was a really interesting experience.
Thank you all
If you're not sure, you can always use a multimeter set to VDC (Volts DC). touch one meter lead to one wire and the other to its opposite. If you get a positive reading, the one on the positive meter lead is hot and the one on the negative lead is cold. if you get a negative reading, it's the opposite. Simple.
Paul Smith
scootinfool.blogspot.com
Scootin' Fool on YouTube
Lancaster County Pennsylvania
2013 Honda PCX-150 (Angry Hornet) - Leo Vince Corsa Exhaust, NCY Variator (13g Rollers), NCY shocks, Givi D322S windscreen, NCY drum brake actuator arm, Denali Soundbomb mini horn
2006 Piaggio Beverly 250 (Rosa)
Mel46 wrote:Here is a way to always know which is hot and which is ground...if the wires are red and black...I used this in aircraft electrical school to remember.
Red is always "positively red hot".
This gets a bit more complicated in a motorcycle harness...Unless it's a Harley, then, like I said before, most of the wires are black. Good times right there.
Paul Smith
scootinfool.blogspot.com
Scootin' Fool on YouTube
Lancaster County Pennsylvania
2013 Honda PCX-150 (Angry Hornet) - Leo Vince Corsa Exhaust, NCY Variator (13g Rollers), NCY shocks, Givi D322S windscreen, NCY drum brake actuator arm, Denali Soundbomb mini horn
2006 Piaggio Beverly 250 (Rosa)
Ishkabibble wrote:Both of the wires on the power supply were black. Hence my comment. This was a really interesting experience. Thank you all
That's because they are massed masnufactured by machine and the polarity will always be correct when assembled - until someone chops the end off Sometimes a wire will have a thin strip of white which can be either + or -, but that is why you check with a meter (as mentioned, if you get a positive reading, then whatever is plugged to the red meter lead is + out).
Those small encapsulated supplies can last a long time if run under max load, but if you run them near max load for too long they tend to die suddenly due to heat and no ventilation (not a good idea to drill some unless you know what you are doing - so don't!)
If I were you and the tester I was going to use a lot had only black leads, I would get some red heat shrink and put it on the + lead so that you would know it from then on. I do this on a lot of things.
Currently own:
Red 2013 Honda PCX150 Givi tall windshield & tailbox - Lots of extra lights Custom seat from Thailand - Bad Boy Airhorn Takegawa Lowering Shocks - Michelin City Grip Tires Headlight assy upgraded to LEDs w/HS5 main bulbs NCY variator, drive face, and rollers
Good for you, Ish - You can't win or loose if you don't make the bet.
As Iceman said, one side of the wire might have a faint white line, or have one side be a bit flat. Which is positive is anybody's guess, but that is where the multimeter comes in. OTOH, with LEDs, if they light up, you guessed right. If they don't, switch the wires. No big deal.
On my scoot, getting there is WAY more than half the fun!
Please paste this address into a new tab and add yourself to the map: https://www.google.com/maps/d/edit?mid=1NlP7xk7KMdJReQnm-iDhldFBdpQ&ll=4.995760578398276%2C0&z=2
but please, don't delete anybody, no matter how badly they deserve deleting
Now all I have to do is find some place around here where I can get five pieces of 1" x 5" x 0.060 steel strips.
Everywhere I've gone around here said "We ain't gots no scraps, but I'se kin sell ye a whole sheet and cut em fer ye. Whatcha makin ennyway?"
Nothing that would require that kind of a purchase, my toothless friend. And a whole sheet is 48" x 96". A couple hundred dollars for five damn little strips.
I'm having another mental block here.
I found something to put here. Add yourself to the PCX-Forza Owner's Map! Go here: https://drive.google.com/open?id=1ULV6Ib-uKsjMpWaPzPwAXmfB7vU&usp=sharing
For instructions how to add yourself go here: http://www.hondapcx.org/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=6437#p88888 Be sure to add your Model, year, color, and name if your scoot has one!
Mel46 wrote:Here is a way to always know which is hot and which is ground...if the wires are red and black...I used this in aircraft electrical school to remember.
Red is always "positively red hot".
This gets a bit more complicated in a motorcycle harness...Unless it's a Harley, then, like I said before, most of the wires are black. Good times right there.
Must you have steel? You can get hobby brass at a place like Michael's or AC Moore (arts and crafts places) If you can stand upping the thickness, HD ( and very likely your good old fashioned local hardware store) has steel flat stock 1/8" x1/2".
You could also use flat stock: http://www.mscdirect.com/product/details/06200059 1/16 is only 25 thousandths bigger than you ask for. Another possibility - wait until school starts and get the machine shop students on it.
A last, out of the box idea - what about a bit of hack saw blade? So long as you don't need to drill a hole in it, you are all set.
On my scoot, getting there is WAY more than half the fun!
Please paste this address into a new tab and add yourself to the map: https://www.google.com/maps/d/edit?mid=1NlP7xk7KMdJReQnm-iDhldFBdpQ&ll=4.995760578398276%2C0&z=2
but please, don't delete anybody, no matter how badly they deserve deleting
I have a clipboard made of aluminum that is just over 0.060. I figured it would be about the right weight and thickness to make a bracket out of, and wouldn't be too terribly affected by the vibration of riding. Steel would be ideal, but I don't know that I have the ability to work it at a size this small.
The bracket has to fit on the bottom of the running light, as the light has a hole at each end, and the reflector bracket has one hole in the center. In order to use a bolt to attach the running light bracket to the reflector bracket, it has to have a hole in the center. The reflector bracket has to have a hole in each end to attach to the running light.
Like this:
Attachments
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I found something to put here. Add yourself to the PCX-Forza Owner's Map! Go here: https://drive.google.com/open?id=1ULV6Ib-uKsjMpWaPzPwAXmfB7vU&usp=sharing
For instructions how to add yourself go here: http://www.hondapcx.org/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=6437#p88888 Be sure to add your Model, year, color, and name if your scoot has one!