Somewhere along the way while my bike has been in bits the 4 pin plug to the base of the fuel tank got damaged. I cut it off and put small spade connectors on the wires so I could still run the bike. I've searched and searched but can't find a OEM plug to refit.
So my plan is to connect the spade connectors then pot them in. Then splice in a generic 4 pin plug on the loom about 5-10 cms away from the tank.
I measured the wire (insulated thickness) at 1.7mm. Looking at DT4 plugs online it states wire size but is that bare wire or insulated thickness?
I'm reasonably apt at wiring stuff but bugger all knowledge on specs and such, so if someone can steer me in the right direction would be most appreciated
Last edited by kiwikrasher on 06 Apr 2016, 10:15, edited 1 time in total.
Happiness is not a destination. It is a way of life.
kiwikrasher wrote:..I measured the wire (insulated thickness) at 1.7mm. Looking at DT4 plugs online it states wire size but is that bare wire or insulated thickness?
By default flex & cable is always measured by conductor diameter mate.
If you think about it , the insulation will be removed to go into connector anyway.
Hth.
What StM said, it's just the bare wire that's measured as that's the only bit that matters spec wise. Be careful measuring multi-strand wire as it deforms as you use Verniers or a micrometer on it, I've had best results measuring m/s immediately next to the insulation.
kiwikrasher wrote:..I measured the wire (insulated thickness) at 1.7mm. Looking at DT4 plugs online it states wire size but is that bare wire or insulated thickness?
By default flex & cable is always measured by conductor diameter mate.
If you think about it , the insulation will be removed to go into connector anyway.
Hth.
Cheers St Marks, I thought that might be the case. I measured it in a hurry and now not where the bike is. I'll have another go if I get up there tomorrow.
Happiness is not a destination. It is a way of life.
Not sure if it's any help, but there was a recall on that part a gazillion years ago, Or if not a recall there was defo a replacement brass version as the orig. part would shear off....usually when you take the tank off for the first time and break the fecker and spill gas all over the floor...I just remember going in to the dealer and they gave me the part no questions asked. They had a perverse logic to it which kinda made sense...the part was fine until you took the tank off....once you did then the part became necessary, but few owners ever get to the stage where they are replacing the fuel filter....whatever.
Actually scrap that. I remembered (after another search on that part number) the plug I need is part of the loom and plugs into that part. That's why I wa shaving trouble sourcing it individually.
I'll just mic up the bare wire and buy a DT4 plug as per my original work around.
Happiness is not a destination. It is a way of life.
D6 wrote:Ahh if you cut it off the harness i cant help. Sorry.
Yeah I did, it got munched. Not entirely sure how but that bike has been put together and pulled apart so many times in the last 4 years I'm lucky that's all that got buggered.
Happiness is not a destination. It is a way of life.
After confirming my planned fix with a electrician (who is into bikes and just fully rebuilt his K1200) I'm now confident I'm on the right track. Just going to pot the spade connectors into the fuel tank side plug with epoxy and fit one of these in the loom so I can still disconnect the tank electrically
Happiness is not a destination. It is a way of life.
kiwikrasher wrote:....... Just going to pot the spade connectors into the fuel tank side plug with epoxy and fit one of these in the loom so I can still disconnect the tank electrically
Hi Kwik, just seen this, and I have a butchered loom in the garage. I can look and see if the fuel pump connector is still on it, if it is I can cut it off with as much as possible and send it to you. Then the plug will still the standard one and you can solder the wires together and then tape up to make it look 'original'
Will look in the morning.