Your both on the right track to compete with the whizzer. I don't like the box on the handle bars but the idea is good....
Scotchmo,
Great looking bullet lights and turn sig sw, where did they come from? What are the key sw near the grips?
A new lighting system I'm working on will have some electronics within the turn sig lights, minamize the wiring and control. The battery on my black non-jackshsft bike is hidden by the chain guard(much better). I assume that your 1.5Amp hr. batterys are in the box?
Also where did the rear rack come from and what did it cost?
do you know where i can find 6v LED turn signal lightsI used the 24 ohm in the charging circuit to keep from overloading the white wire when the battries are flat. All of the relay & components fit inside the small lights.
I had looked at some of the flasher based designed circuits and auto bulbs then decided that I am just to cheap. Went all solid state on one bike about $25 total cost. Then built this equivelant circuit to use the same cheap lights about $30 for this circuit. Of course it is all false economy as the labor is high(but fun).
Do you know the best place to purchase 6V LED turn signal lightsI have a similar circuit on my bike. Rather than using the NE555 and two 6v relays, I use a 6v LED turn signal flasher designed for a motorcycle. It is a little pricier option ($21.50 on eBay) but simpler. I also use off the shelf 6v multi-LED automotive turn signal, tail and brake light bulbs (Superbrightled). Again, simpler but probably more expensive. I’m using dual element LED bulbs on the front for turn signal/running lights. I like your arrangement and may try something like it in the future.
One thing you can do to simplify the circuit is to remove the 24 ohm resistor from the charging circuit. The coil that the white wire hooks up to has a couple ohms resistance on it’s own. Additional resistance is not needed, especially with an 8ah battery. I use a 1.3ah 6v lead acid battery. I ran tests with and without a zener regulator. Either way, it never overcharged the battery. An 8ah lead acid battery can easily burn off the entire output of the white wire with no harm. If you are worried about overcharging the battery, the zener would be a better option. Additional resistance wastes charging power before the battery is fully charged. The zener regulator won’t waste anything until the battery is full. In my experience, neither is needed with the HT white wire/rectifier diode.
Do you know of a place to purchase 6V LED turn signal lights![]()
hello again, you are a life saver, thankz for the signal flasher advice, One more or 2 more things, i would like to know your advice on fuel gas mixture on a DAX 66cc engine because i was supplied with 2 mixtures and neither really works good they start out fine and then after 2 miles it starts cutting out and things, i dont know if it is hot or 2 much gas or 2 little on the air fuel miture i have a CNS carb and it is 10 X's more powerful than the stock carb also what type of plug would you suggest, and thanks againI have a similar circuit on my bike. Rather than using the NE555 and two 6v relays, I use a 6v LED turn signal flasher designed for a motorcycle. It is a little pricier option ($21.50 on eBay) but simpler. I also use off the shelf 6v multi-LED automotive turn signal, tail and brake light bulbs (Superbrightled). Again, simpler but probably more expensive. I’m using dual element LED bulbs on the front for turn signal/running lights. I like your arrangement and may try something like it in the future.
One thing you can do to simplify the circuit is to remove the 24 ohm resistor from the charging circuit. The coil that the white wire hooks up to has a couple ohms resistance on it’s own. Additional resistance is not needed, especially with an 8ah battery. I use a 1.3ah 6v lead acid battery. I ran tests with and without a zener regulator. Either way, it never overcharged the battery. An 8ah lead acid battery can easily burn off the entire output of the white wire with no harm. If you are worried about overcharging the battery, the zener would be a better option. Additional resistance wastes charging power before the battery is fully charged. The zener regulator won’t waste anything until the battery is full. In my experience, neither is needed with the HT white wire/rectifier diode.
The light switch came from eBay (same as # 260541057958).