Right, but certain components of the bike may draw more if it's available and through wires that aren't heavy enough, frying wires and/or components.
Cycle sites (not forums) wouldn't likely have started putting out this warning if it had zero truth.
I appreciate that you have a different opinion, and you can risk your bike if you want, but the main point is why would you even start your car to jump your bike?
Any car battery has hundreds of available CCA and doesn't need to have the car running. Are you going to play russian roulette because you know someone that lived through it? It's foolish to take the risk with old electronics that are expensive and scarce, or to recommend that someone else take that chance. This forum is by enthusiasts that have some interest in helping other enthusiasts, so why tell someone there is ZERO risk when you have no chips in the pile and can't guarantee the outcome?
-K
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No, they won't draw more amperage if it is available. I could get into the theory, but you aren't listening to theory, so just think about actual operation. Your windshield wiper motor does not draw more power than your starter motor, but it does not burn out when hooked up to the battery that powers your starter motor. The same can be said of your window motors, the tiny little lights that illuminate various parts of your car, the headlights, taillights, turn signals, ad nauseum. In other words, individual electrical components will only "demand" a limited amount of power no matter the supply. So, starting a motorcycle from a car will not harm it because it will only demand a certain amount of power that is predetermined from the construction of the electrical components in the motorcycle.
It is good that you are trying to figure this out, but you are focussed on the wrong concept. You are looking at the supply side. Electrical components are only concerned with voltage and whether or not minimum current is supplied. As long as the voltage is within range (anywhere from 6V to 14.4+V for our systems), and amperage is sufficient, they will operate. If you get too far out of the range, then bad things happen. If you supply massively higher amperage than is required... then the systems continue to operate as normal because the parts will only draw what their physical construction allows them to draw.
Regards,
Camelman