mecsw500
Active member
If you are getting down into the mid 9 volt range on starting it’s very possible that the ECU and other modules are not getting sufficient voltage to operate reliably. It might not be the voltage level it drops to, but how it drops to that level. Lithium batteries can drop off suddenly rather than smoothly under load. They have a different operational capability that might be at home on a modern four cylinder sport bike, but trying to kick an big old lump of a Rotax V twin into life Might not be the best match of technologies. Old air and air/oil cooled BMW bikes can suffer the same problem.Peter
Today I checked the battery and the connection's looked good. Attached my Fluke meter and checked voltage.
Resting voltage - 13.2 volt
Ignition on - 12.8 volt
Than I used the min/max feature on my meter.
Min voltage during starting - 9.4 volt
Max voltage after starting - 13.4 volt
Avg voltage 13.2 volt
The voltage on the battery terminal really didn’t rise above 13.4 volt
Looks like the battery is ok.
Rather than chase your tail constantly, perhaps get a new traditional AGM battery, charge it up and then try it.
These bikes and their electronics were designed around the way voltage drops under load with a lead acid battery. A good AGM battery falls into that category. Lithium technology batteries have their uses, but not trying to fire up a large V twin motor with electronics designed over a decade and a half ago.