I have points, aftermarket, with new condenser, installed this spring. I charged it on my trickle charger right after it went dead. Didn't check the voltage before or after. But it has been over 24 hours now. We had an incredible wind/rain storm, winds 80mph and it is still very windy, branches everywhere so I haven't had time to look.
Now this battery has to be 10+, maybe older. It has been great dry cell, I charge at the beginning and end of every season and store it inside on a dry shelf.
I don't think I have ever had a bike battery last so long. I had a 750 Nighthawk years ago that I was running on a low battery and it was pretty much the same scenario, I think it took out the stator as a result. Hope it is not the case. The bike always run decent, I drain the carbs every now and then, and for the winter.
Thanks much. I'll get back on the voltage.
Battery could just be going bad and not accepting a charge causing your running issues. Throw your old battery on the trickle charger and give it 24 hours, measure voltage before starting your charge. Then measure after coming off charge and then two hours later. This figures can help diagnose if you battery is toast or merely weak. The Dyna S as HondaMan mentions is unkind to our old bikes because it consumes so much power. Trickle chargers won’t fully charge a deeply depleted battery in 24 hours, FYI it may take longer or charged at a little higher than a battery maintainer/trickle charge can do in a short period of time.
Just like on a car, a bike often won’t be able to stay running when the battery falls below a certain voltage, on some vehicles this is 10v, which is a severely depleted charge level. Sounds like your battery may be severely depleted or have a bad cell.
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