I was planning asking the same question and seeing as this thread is already started I'll add my query here.
In the FAQ's there is a link for a "Battery Eliminator". I have no idea if it would work on any of the SOHC's but someone saw fit to include it in the "Where to buy" list for our bikes. I'm building a "Frankenstein" road racer and am dropping weight from the bike wherever I can. If I could replace the battery with this I would. Bike is a '78 750 w/Accel 5.0 coils and Dyna S ignition. Kickstart only.
I would very much like to see the bat pac pointer in the FAQ removed, as I don't see how it can work with the SOHC4 charging system that needs the field excited to produce any power, ever. To my knowledge not one single person has EVER posted a working solution using this device.
I'm very close to my limit of rehashing this same old topic. I fear the value of this forum will be severely diminished if we continue with a policy of distributed misinformation.
Sean,
My recommendation is that you work up an electrical budget for the bike you wish to build, using the components you plan on incorporating.
Here's a spring board example:
Stock CB 750 electrical budget / minimum lighting
3.3 A / 40 W -low beam Headlight
___________- Neutral lamp
___________- oil lamp
0.58A / 7W -tail light
1.91A / 23W -Stop light
1.17A / 14 W -7W x 2 Front run lights
1.0 A / 12W - 3W X 4 Instrument lights
1.2 A / 15W - ignition estimate (while idling with points, 95 degree dwell on each, 5 ohm coils)
1.7A / 20.4W – Alternator field coil (While idling)
0.0A / 0 W - Turn sigs?
__________ - Dyna ignition module ?
9.78A /117.4W -total (normally drawn from system)
0.05A /2.5W - wiring, connector, and switch contact resistance losses
(Assumes 0.5 v voltage loss in wiring at 10 A draw)
approx. 3.28A (or 40 watt) delivery from alternator at idle (1000RPM), provided field coil is powered with 12V.
Extrapolated from Honda Shop manual chart of 6.5 amp drain with lights on.
Peak Alternator output – 17.5A (210 watts at 5000 RPM)
To run the engine, the ignition and alternator must be fully powered (1.7 + 1.2 A or 2.9 Amps) The idling alternator (without battery) can probably supply this much power. Just don't step on the brake or operate ANY lighting. You'll still need a power source (about 3 amps) to get the alternator and bike started with ALL lighting disabled.
Warning...There may be math errors above.
Cheers,