Gord



Moderators: Oldewing, CYBORG, robin1731, Forum Moderators
ericheath wrote:I tend to agree with Robin and there are several of us who know they failed shortly after voltage issues, a regulator that goes crazy. By the time you notice your battery is boiling out too fast, you've already been feeding the Dyna 15?16?17? volts for a while. We all know this happens pretty regularly on these old bikes due to simple resistance in the connections.
Dyna has no way of knowing this or testing them for this. A separate voltage/current limiter might protect them better. We have read/heard/ speculated that it's quality control from Dyna with a seeming spike in failures, but this spike is coming when all the wiring is getting -well----old.
this is an all too familiar story. voltage spikes ? poor fitting ? quality control issues ? whatever the reason , it happens quite regularly.a very common topic on this forum alone.i'm willing to bet there are a whole lot more not posted . best solution ? get some points and become familiar with setting them . it's not too hard.roachb wrote:I had a Dyna S in my '75 GL 1000 for years without any issues but a year and a half ago it failed. It was intermittent at first but finally one module failed. I purchased the reduced-cost replacement and today I lost two cylinders again. I'm sending it back to Dynatek for testing, but I wonder if I should not reinstall the points. Points are reliable. Randakk likes points. The Dyna is out of warranty, which is only one year.