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GL1000
Condenser Ground Upgrade
If
you own a Honda GL1000 - congratulations! You own one of the best
motorcycle designs ever. I'm biased of course, but the well-regarded
folks at the Guggenheim Museum selected the original Honda GL1000
as one of the featured machines in the wildly popular Art of the
Motorcycle exhibition series.
Honda
GL1000 tuning is considered a "black art" by some, but like any
other engine tuning challenge, it's really just a matter of attention
to detail.
On
a GL1000, it is very critical that your condenser assembly have
a solid ground for efficient operation of the wasted spark ignition.
This is especially important since the condenser is mounted so
much further from the breaker points compared to most engines.
Faulty or insufficient condenser ground is a common source of
poor idle, high speed miss and shortened breaker point life. Without
getting into the complex physics involved, your condenser is an
under-appreciated, marvelous device that is very important for
proper ignition performance.
The
condenser is connected to the points by a long wiring "pigtail"
that attaches to the condenser leads as well as the primary leads
from the coil pairs near the condenser's mounting location to
the left side of the battery box. The path to ground for the GL1000's
siamesed condenser assembly is by two 5 mm screws which attach
the condenser to the battery box. The battery box is attached
to the frame with 3 bolts of it's own.
Why
should you care? If your battery box and / or attachment hardware
have any corrosion issues, your ground may be compromised. There
are more sophisticated ways to test this ground circuit, but I
usually test for this by running a heavy test lead with alligator
clips on each end from the condenser body to the negative battery
post while the bike in question is idling. If the idle speed and
rhythm improve when the test lead is attached, your problem is
identified. Clean and scrape as necessary to get a good ground
for the condenser.
The
best way to cure this issue forever (short of a ground-up restoration),
is to install a dedicated ground cable for the condenser. You
could run one from the condenser to the negative battery terminal,
but I consider it bad practice to clutter up a bike's wiring with
extraneous connections at the battery...it makes battery maintenance
harder and no one needs another excuse not to service their battery
on a routine basis. A better approach is to run the dedicated
ground cable from the condenser to a frame attachment bolt. I
like the left side, main hanger bolt. This is the same point where
the main chassis ground wire from the battery attaches. You probably
need to remove and clean that ground anyway!
Condenser
ground fault is major issue on these bikes due to location of
the condenser assembly and the distance from the breaker points.
In fact, it's hard to think of any vehicle with a greater distance
between these two critical components. The fact that Honda chose
to affect the condenser ground through the battery box is not
an ideal solution for obvious reasons. On most GL1000s that I
see, the battery box needs attention due to the corrosive effects
of battery vapor.
I
developed this particular fix to help resolve poor idle, high
speed miss and shortened point life which is very common on these
bikes. I consider this upgrade to be good hygiene and a prudent
measure even if you have no present condenser ground issues. I
now put this upgrade on all bikes that pass through my shop.
I used to sell these upgrade cables, but stopped since I had supplier
hassles and they are so easy to make. All you need is a section
of high quality 10 gauge wire, a ring terminal to mount under
the left engine hanger (sized to pass a 10 mm bolt) and spade
terminal to slide under one of the condenser mounting screws.
All connections should be soldered and covered with shrink-wrap.
The finished length of the cable should be 12" overall.
Here are the
installation directions I previously shipped with my cables (copyrighted
material):
click
here
Note:
The example shown has a red cover to highlight the correct location
and routing. I recommend that you use black-cover wire to make
this inconspicuous enough for a concours show bike. Highly
recommended for all GL1000s running breaker points!
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