Yesterday I took a long ride on my CB350 to the DMV inspection station -the bike is not road legal yet but I don't have a trailer nor do I want to pay for one when it is a matter of a 20 minute ride. The bike didn't pass the inspection for some paperwork variation on the tire size, very long subject to discuss here.
The battery was freshly charged, as it used to discharge during the test rides after the restoration. I put the blame in the fact that I had to extensively use the starter, that the bike didn't ride long, and that a new battery needs a few charge-discharge cycles to get its full capacity.
One day I was taking some pictures with the bike idling and it just stopped. When I tried to start it the lights were dim, the battery was empty, but fortunately the CB350 has a permanent magnet so I could start it with the kickstart. From that day I suspected that the aftermarket H4 headlight was draining the battery, as the original lamp was something like 35 or 40 watts.
I did a check at the schematic and it seems that the alternator has three windings. One of them is used for "day" riding, to keep the battery charged and to run the ignition. The other two are for "night" riding, only switched on when the light is switched on. According to the specifications, the alternator gives only 100 W, pretty scarce when the low beam is 55 W.
Anyway, yesterday it was all road riding, so the alternator was revved high and therefore should be giving all its juice. When I returned home, again the bike stalled and the light was dim. So I just switched the light off and kickstarted it back to life. Then, the headlight would bright up, clear sign that the alternator is doing its work. So why is the battery discharging? The only thing that comes to my mind is that the lamp is taking more juice that what the alternator can give, so it takes what is needed from the battery. But with a discharged battery, the lamp is so bright with only the alternator. Strange.
The blinkers will flash at the right rate, but when revved, they just stay on, also a clear sign of the alternator raising the system voltage. I even removed the earth wire with the bike started, and the engine kept running with only the alternator juice, as well as the headlight gleaming.
So, it is either a matter of going back to the original lamp, or checking the harness in case there is some loose conector somewhere -which I doubt, because there are no one-way devices, if the battery powers the lamp, when the alternator gives its juice the current should flow back to the battery. I would hate to remove my H4 lamp, not only because it was hard to find a reflector, but also because I can't think of riding at night with a low-power headlight.
I have never had any trouble with H4 in my CB750, but it's true that its alternator is more powerful. Does anybody of you have H4 fitted in your CB350 or CL350?