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I am working on a beautifully restored military WLA Harley. The bike was finished last year and within the first 150 miles, the battery started to boil and leak acid all over the battery box. I checked the voltage regulator and it's limiting voltage to 6.6 volts. The battery is an odd size and my only choice is a standard flooded lead acid 6 volt 18 Ah battery. I'm thinking of installing two AGM 6 volt 8.2 Ah batteries wired parallel. That would give me 6 volts and a little over 16 Ah. The problem is, these batteries are deep cycle units for use in a house alarm or one of those kiddie cars. Am I asking for trouble attaching these batteries to a primitive DC charging system? Any input or ideas would be greatly appreciated.
If the machine is a stock WLA, I believe it'll have a 3 brush DC generator. Is there a small relay mounted on or adjacent to the generator about 2 1/2 in. long by 1 in. wide? If so, it's the stock 3 brush. There is no voltage regulator on a 3 brush generator. Old Farmall tractors had the same system. You set the base charge rate by moving the 3rd brush which has a slotted mount around the commutator until the charge voltage with the engine running is correct. When you turn on the lights, the small relay energizes and the lighting field coil is energized to increase the voltage a little more to carry the load of the lights. Also, if that relay is stuck closed, no lighting load, it will overcharge the battery. I can try to scan and send the proper service info. if you want for a 3 brush gen.
Well, there you go. This is what makes this forum the best on the internet. That is exactly the system on this bike. I had never seen a voltage regulator that small before and you just explained why. I'll do soon searching but, if you could scan that for me, that would be great. Thanks, I'll guess I'll order a the correct battery for it today.
The points shunt from battery + to ground.