Kiwi_Roy Posted February 2, 2016 Posted February 2, 2016 I highly recommend replacing the incandescent lamps and lamp-holders with LED type bulbs. I have done this on several bikes now with good results To get the screws out remove the gauges then you can grip the brass inserts with a pair of pliers while undoing the Allen screws, don't worry if the plastic gets broken a bit JB Weld is your friend. I really like the type 194 single LEDs from www.superbrightleds.com, they are an AC lamp (have a built in bridge rectifier) so you don't have to worry about polarity and they glue nicely into the fitting. You need to select lamps to match the filter colour otherwise they won't show through properly The low fuel light is a special case, even when the tank is full the sensor is drawing a small current, if you just replace the lamp with an LED it will be on because the small current is more than enough to light an LED, The original lamp and sensor are a fine balancing act, when the sensors uncovered it heats up and drops in resistance, the lamp starts to heat up and goes up in resistance. The easiest way to deal with this is simply wire the LED in parallel with an original lamp, this gives the thermistor sensor the current it is used to, the extra load the LED draws is insignificant. Another thing you might notice is the oil light coming on in the rain, this is because the current tracks across the dirt of the pressure sensor the LED draws so little 5 milliamps is enough to turn it on, wiping the switch clean is usually enough to let the lamp turn off probably some CRC or a cover would help. The pictures below are from two different projects, sorry if they seem out of sequence. Here's what the original light fitting looks like complete with cracked screw holders I throw those nasty lamp-holders away. The brass inserts were spinning at this point but you can see they are easy to grab with needle nose pliers. Some Ty-wraps to take the strain off the wires, the wires are just soldered direct to the bulbs, I tried using the appropriate sockets but they just add extra stuff to go wrong. At the bottom in a piece of white heat shrink you can see the old incandescent lamp in parallel with the Low Fuel LED The next two pictures really belong in the Speedhut gauge thread. The lamp fitting in this case has been reduced in height to take advantage of the Speedhut Gauges that are only 1" high. A corresponding amount was taken off the cover, I used a strip of 3/4" masking tape as a guide and chopped the lump off where the speedo gears were smoothing it off with Bondo.
JBBenson Posted February 2, 2016 Posted February 2, 2016 I highly recommend replacing the incandescent lamps and lamp-holders with LED type bulbs. I have done this on several bikes now with good results To get the screws out remove the gauges then you can grip the brass inserts with a pair of pliers while undoing the Allen screws, don't worry if the plastic gets broken a bit JB Weld is your friend. I really like the type 194 single LEDs from www.superbrightleds.com, they are an AC lamp (have a built in bridge rectifier) so you don't have to worry about polarity and they glue nicely into the fitting. WORK IN PROGRESS I am going to do this. In the 'Looking at 2000 V11 Sport" thread, you mentioned that the fuel light needs a "special arrangement" What do you mean by this exactly?
Craig Posted February 3, 2016 Posted February 3, 2016 I did this and used some particularly bright LEDs. They are too bright at night. The High Beam indicator is way too bright. I had to dim them. I kept the incandescent bulb for the fuel.
czakky Posted February 3, 2016 Posted February 3, 2016 I never got past the spinning Allen heads on the dash. How are you getting to the brass holders?
Scud Posted February 3, 2016 Posted February 3, 2016 If the little screws are spinning, you will need to remove the plastic cup that covers the gauges so you can access the plastic T-shaped lamp holder from the other side. You may be able to force a drywall screw into the back of the brass threaded inserts to stop them from spinning - this will do less damage to the lamp holder than the pliers will. Or you could order a new plastic T (with threads included).
Kiwi_Roy Posted February 3, 2016 Author Posted February 3, 2016 From memory I think I did as Scud mentioned but grabbed the inserts with a pair of needle nose pliers from the back side, one leg of the pliers in the hole the other gripping plastic squeezing the two together. Refer to the second picture you'll see what I mean. Craig, can you remember how you dimmed the bulbs, a resistor about 2-5,000 Ohms I would think. It would be possible to have a lower Voltage common supply on the Red/Black wire with Day and Night settings but I rarely ride at night these days. The direction indicator LED might be more difficult. Low fuel should be bright, besides it never sees full Voltage.
Stick Posted February 7, 2016 Posted February 7, 2016 The only decent way to dim an LED is by PWM of the voltage. PWM = Pulse Width Modulation. Typically done at higher frequency, so you don't see any pulsing or flicker. Basically, it's like chopping up the incoming 12V into a bunch of ons and offs, but with a specific duty-cycle. And the weird issue with the fuel light is that the bike uses an NTC. Basically it's a resistor, but when it's wet with petrol, it sheds it's heat into the petrol. When petrol drops, NTC "gets hot", and it's resistance goes down. This is why you see the lamp glow, then turn brighter. NTC is opposite what normal resistors do. (Inverse heat/resistance curve.) Anyway, the NTC NEEDS some current flow to get hot, and the bulb allows the proper flow, whereas, an LED cannot produce enough current flow to make the NTC behave as designed.
Craig Posted February 7, 2016 Posted February 7, 2016 Craig, can you remember how you dimmed the bulbs, a resistor about 2-5,000 Ohms I would think. The only decent way to dim an LED is by PWM of the voltage. PWM = Pulse Width Modulation. Typically done at higher frequency, so you don't see any pulsing or flicker. Basically, it's like chopping up the incoming 12V into a bunch of ons and offs, but with a specific duty-cycle. Stick is correct unless you are creative. I put two layers of painters tape inside the transparent housing over the high beam and flashers. I happened to have blue painters tape and green painters tape lying around.
docc Posted February 7, 2016 Posted February 7, 2016 Craig, can you remember how you dimmed the bulbs, a resistor about 2-5,000 Ohms I would think. The only decent way to dim an LED is by PWM of the voltage. PWM = Pulse Width Modulation. Typically done at higher frequency, so you don't see any pulsing or flicker. Basically, it's like chopping up the incoming 12V into a bunch of ons and offs, but with a specific duty-cycle. Stick is correct unless you are creative. I put two layers of painters tape inside the transparent housing over the high beam and flashers. I happened to have blue painters tape and green painters tape lying around. Guzzi guys and analogue solutions!
Kiwi_Roy Posted February 9, 2016 Author Posted February 9, 2016 The only decent way to dim an LED is by PWM of the voltage. PWM = Pulse Width Modulation. Typically done at higher frequency, so you don't see any pulsing or flicker. Basically, it's like chopping up the incoming 12V into a bunch of ons and offs, but with a specific duty-cycle. And the weird issue with the fuel light is that the bike uses an NTC. Basically it's a resistor, but when it's wet with petrol, it sheds it's heat into the petrol. When petrol drops, NTC "gets hot", and it's resistance goes down. This is why you see the lamp glow, then turn brighter. NTC is opposite what normal resistors do. (Inverse heat/resistance curve.) Anyway, the NTC NEEDS some current flow to get hot, and the bulb allows the proper flow, whereas, an LED cannot produce enough current flow to make the NTC behave as designed. And the incandescent lamp is just the opposite when it's cold the resistance is low so it applies almost full Voltage across the thermistor This is the reason I use one of the old lamps in parallel with my LED the lamp applies the full 12Volts across the thermistor until its uncovered. It's a fine balancing act between bulb heat and thermistor heat. Really it would be much better if our bikes had one of the magnetic float and reed switch sensors some of the other Guzzis have. Interesting point about dimming the LED with pulse width modulation, the eyes are fooled by a fast flicker, have you tried that? I like it that the LEDs are visible in bright sunlight and I rarely ride at night, with old age I find I get very disoriented in dim light.
Stick Posted February 9, 2016 Posted February 9, 2016 I have not messed with the incandescents that are in there. I have built a PWM controller for my home-made heated gear, but I have that one running at about 3 Hz, so that you can "see" where the channel is set at a glance. The ones you buy, it seems like you have to look at the controller for about 1 or 2 seconds to figure out the setting. I like mine better, because it keeps my eyes on the road.
footgoose Posted February 9, 2016 Posted February 9, 2016 It's great getting moto-electrics education here. Some of it goes in one ear and out the other but, the light bulb in the cloud over my head burns a bit brighter! I appreciate the thoughtful input. 1
gstallons Posted February 15, 2016 Posted February 15, 2016 This site has many intelligent people and it is enjoyable to learn from them . 1
Stick Posted March 23, 2016 Posted March 23, 2016 Howdy dudes (and dudettes?): I read a solution to the issue for the fuel light, if you're installing a LED in place of the small indicator bulb. Basically, it's an 82 Ohm, 5W resistor in parallel with the LED: read it here: http://www.ducati.ms/forums/57-supersport/482265-wanted-led-bulb-list-95-900ss-6.html#post5707705
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