Hi Don,
I'm in wiring hell! I made the harness for my 1970 Bonneville, but that was a long time ago and it was pretty simple and - well, I don't know, maybe I had more brain cells back then. I understand the ignition and lighting parts of it, but regulator/rectifier, starter relay, starter, kill switch and start button have kind of driven me crazy. I'm not using the stock harness for two reasons. One is that I'm leaving out a bunch of stock items. Signals, idiot lights, neutral switch, clutch switch, oil pressure light, clutch switch, and turn signal buzzer. And the other reason is that since so many other things on the bike are custom, I thought it should have a custom wiring harness. I got some nice wire and sheathing and connectors and a crimping tool from Rhode Island Wiring Service and Vintage Connections, and I want to make a neat and simple harness that will be as unobtrusive as possible. I've spent too many hours searching things like simple motorcycle wiring and printing out the diagrams that show up. Trouble is, so many of them are different. Alternators with three wires, four wires, one wire that the writer says should be capped off, different color wires, and it just makes me do more dithering. I've been making my own diagram that reflects the commonalities in the ones that I've printed, but I'm kind of paralyzed by doubt. Wow, this is sounding too much like a therapy session. Better stop.
Anyway, I bought a GL1000 battery strap and made some aluminum clips to hold it in place.
I made an aluminum plate to go under the battery box, and a bracket to hold the starter solenoid. The box will face the back of the motorcycle, and the solenoid will sit behind it. The regulator/rectifier is mounted underneath the plate, and the wires from it come up through the grommet. The wires will be enclosed in braided thermo sheathing.
So that's where I am right now, switching between thinking about wires, thinking about shift linkage, and thinking about putting baffles in the megaphones. I could probably fall in love with the sound of open pipes on the bike, but I'd feel like a bully riding it around like that.
Oh, one more thing. I got a Motogadget m-Lock, and I'm figuring out where to mount it. I didn't want to have a key, but needed a way to cut power to the start button, and I think the m-Lock is the neatest way to go.
Thanks for looking.
Vincent