New LED Headlight for the Honda Pacific Coast

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I pulled off the HID headlight bulb that I had installed several years ago on my Honda Pacific Coast PC800.  While the light was good, I was never very happy with the color.  Also I was having some trouble with noise on the tachometer sense line for the fuel injection conversion I’ve been working on.  I figured the HID system might have been introducing some high frequency noise to the bike.

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Removing the HID system required me to take the windshield off to gain access to the area above the headlight housing.  I made quick work of removing the HID system from the bike.

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There is a little voltage regulator and controller that comes with the LED headlight.  I zip tied it to the front structural member.  Not too hard to do.  Also this kit doesn’t require any new electrical wires run to it (the HID did).

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The light looks really nice and white when it’s turned on.  No spilled light anywhere.  Not too bad!

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Great light pattern.  I’m looking forward to testing this out at night once the ice melts a bit.  For those interested, this is the light: http://www.cyclopsadventuresports.com/3800-Lumen-H4-LED-Headlight-bulb-_p_83.html

Fuel Return or Vent Line on the PC800 Fuel Injection Conversion Project

Back in the spring, I had my PC800 up and running on fuel injection with a few minor problems.  Then a few things intervened to keep me from making further progress.  I bought a new-to-me Toyota 4runner that kept me enthralled all summer with 4x4ing in the mountains and the hose barb that I had JB Welded onto a modified fuel gauge sensor snapped off, dumping gas all over my garage.

Fast forward to the last month or so… With winter approaching, I’ve decided to do some major work to my 4runner (solid axle swap, etc etc etc).  To be able to do that, I need garage space.  Thus I’ve been cleaning and reorganizing the garage.  I took about four 4runner loads of stuff to Goodwill and a few more loads worth went to the garbage man and recycling guy.  Not too bad.  Today I finally reorganized my garage enough to have both motorcycles (my other is a 1979 Yamaha XS1100 Special) parked where I can access both, get both in and out of the garage, and work on both of them (the XS1100 needs a little work on the rear brake pedal).  Thus finally I was able to fix the fuel return line on the PC800.

Looking into the VTX1300 Honda Fury’s manual, I stumbled upon some information on page 6-36.  The rest of the manual lists a “fuel return line” which up until this point I had plumbed into the fuel tank in a variety of ways.  On automotive fuel pumps, there is generally a return line to keep the fuel pump cool (for external pumps).  Based on what I knew about this VTX1300 pump and what I saw in the manual, I thought it was the same thing.  But lo and behold!  Page 6-36 listed it as a fuel return vent line.  A little more sleuthing and I had fairly convinced myself that this is actually a vent line for the fuel pump.

To test this hypothesis, I needed to get the bike up and running.  Since the spring it hadn’t run because of the previously mentioned reasons.  Thus it was finally time to get the fuel gauge sensor remounted and leak-free.  That ended up being a bit of a process.  I had marred the gasket mating surface on the tank and the tabs on the fuel gauge were bent a bit.  I used a pair of pliers on the tabs on the gauge to bend them back and I used a ball peen hammer to slowly smooth the metal back out and push the metal out a bit to get a good seal.  It took several tries and adjustments before the seal seated properly and kept fuel from leaking out.  Until I fill the tank completely and let it sit for a while (including some thermal cycles), I won’t know for sure everything is good but at least with my checks of leaning the bike over on its side, it looks good.

I left the supposed vent line from the fuel pump open to atmosphere and cranked the bike over.  After sitting since May, the bike fired right up on the first try.  Not too bad!  I let it idle for a couple minutes in the garage and then revved the engine a few times.  No fuel came out of the vent line.  I’m pretty well convinced now that it is actually a vent line and not a fuel return line.

As a result, I decided to connect the vent line to an intake port that I had previously installed in the air box and left dead-ended.  Now the vent line goes into the air box (like the crankcase breather hose) where it can safely vent into the air being sucked in by the engine where it will be burned in the combustion process.  If I find out that the suction isn’t advantageous for the pump (like if I start sucking up large amounts of gasoline), I will instead dead-end the vent line into a little air filter that would sit up in the gas cap filler area (for monitoring purposes).

Unfortunately it doesn’t look like I will be able to test ride the PC800 before winter really sets in.  With work this week, I won’t get a chance to get out before we get a big dump of snow.  Unless we get lucky in December with some warm days to melt out the driveway (it’s perpetually in shade and gets very icy when it snows), I probably won’t be able to test ride until April.

The test ride will include two main things: 1) make sure the fuel system is all setup and okay; 2) verify that the noise I was experiencing on the ignition sense line has been fixed.  I wrapped the entire line in copper foil that is grounded to the main ground point for the ECU at one end to make a poor man’s coaxial cable.  If I still have noise, I’ll change that wire out for a real coaxial cable and ground one end of the outer braid.  The noise was causing me to get erroneous RPM spikes that were flooding the engine.

I also will do a little fuel injection wiring harness rerouting to make it easier to put the plastics back on the bike.  The main harness goes along the right side of the bike and where it goes out and around the subframe that the faux gas tank plastics attach to, it makes it difficult to align the side plastics.  I can put that bundle of wires inside that subframe and thus should have a much easier time putting the plastics back together.  Before all the plastics go back on though, I will do a test ride to make sure all is right in the world.

Someday it would be nice to get a functional idle air control on the bike (I have air taps installed for that purpose that are currently dead-ended) but it seems that I can get the bike to start pretty reliably without it.  Considering all the headache I went through before trying to get an IAC motor to work (spoiler alert: stepper motor control isn’t available on the MicroSquirt V3 board) using PWM control, it’s probably not worth the trouble at this point unless I expect to be starting the engine in below freezing weather often.

I’ve already started thinking about the next big Honda Pacific Coast project on the horizon: fully electric PC800!

Welding up the O2 exhaust sensor bung on the PC800

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After my little incident with a backfire causing the JB-Welded exhaust O2 sensor bung to blow out of my PC800, I decided it was time to weld up the bung properly.

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As luck would have it, Andrew has a portable welder and volunteered to do some welding for me.

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We had to take off the JB Weld from the exhaust to give a clean surface to weld to.

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Then Andrew tacked on the O2 sensor bung with the exhaust in place.


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Then we removed the exhaust from the bike.  The front cylinder exhaust pipe would not detach from the resonator chamber so we ended up cutting it off with a hacksaw.  Not the most ideal situation but it got the muffler assembly off.

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Then we setup to weld the O2 sensor bung onto the exhaust system.

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Next I put the exhaust back on the bike.  I found some exhaust pipe of the right diameter to barely slip over the existing pipe.  I used a couple exhaust band clamps to make the seal but the front one wouldn’t hold properly.
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At least the O2 sensor is in the right place now.

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At this point I also discovered that my front cylinder spark plugs were fouled.  I replaced them with Iridium plugs that I had been saving for a special occasion.  It was probably 40,000 miles since the last time these plugs were changed and my fuel injection experimentation certainly hasn’t helped them any.

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With the exhaust still leaking from the right clamp, I had to find another solution.

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Thus I made some soup for lunch with a particularly tall can.

20150522_134932And now I have an exhaust patch made with a soup can, exhaust putty (basically furnace cement), and exhaust tape (basically fiberglass mesh).  It all holds well and I haven’t had another exhaust leak.  Certainly this isn’t the preferred method of rejoining a PC800 exhaust to the bike but it’s what I had to do to make it all work.  The other points where I could have disconnected the front exhaust tube were equally rusted in place as the rear disconnect point.

Now back to tuning…