skelly Posted November 20, 2016 Posted November 20, 2016 (edited) Hi all. I'm about to make a new wiring loom for the katana. However I have a small issue. I cant find anywhere that can supply some of the connectors. The ones I need are... Clock pod connector with twelve 2mm ? male round pins. IGN switch connector with four 6.3mm female spades. Fuse box connector with eight 6.3mm female spades. Rear light connector with four 3mm female spades. @Admin please feel free to move this to the wanted section if you think it constitutes a wanted ad rather than a technical help type thing.. Any ideas ? Cheers. Skel. Edited November 20, 2016 by skelly extra info Quote
Dezza Posted November 21, 2016 Posted November 21, 2016 If you get the 8 way connector on Eblag item number 151430793986 the male part is a direct replacement for the connector that fits into the stock fuse box on a kat, efe, gsxr etc. For further info, the male parts for the four and six way connectors for the same item number are direct replacements for the connectors that fit into the CDI unit on an efe. It took years of trial and error and buying various connectors to find this out, and was driving me nuts until last year when I found these. I have a small stash of them now in case the seller goes awol. Hope this helps 1 Quote
KATANAMANGLER Posted November 21, 2016 Posted November 21, 2016 You can buy replacement male and female spades designed to fit inside the existing plastic block connectors. With some care you can dig the old ones out by releasing a little tab that holds them in. Vehicle wiriing products supply the replacements. 1 Quote
KATANAMANGLER Posted November 21, 2016 Posted November 21, 2016 The ones you want are the larger brass ones "with latch". When its a block conector with both halves I replace with a new block conector but when the conector goes into a fixed connection on a CDI or an instrument pannel I reuse the block but replace the blades. You also need the crimping pliers for these fittings. Quote
skelly Posted November 21, 2016 Author Posted November 21, 2016 Thanks guys. I now have the 4 pin ign connector, 8 pin fusebox connector. Awesome. I'm just stuck on the clocks right now as they have a 2mm male round pin which no one seems to list. If I can find some of these, I can pull the old ones out of the loom plug and pop new ones in. What I think I need is the male bit for these...http://www.vehicle-wiring-products.eu/product.php/994/round-pin-female-2mm Cheers. Skel. Quote
Jaydee Posted November 21, 2016 Posted November 21, 2016 (edited) Check out Kojaycat while you're at it. They do a lot of replacement Suzuki connectors. Worth a browse. http://kojaycat.co.uk/epages/950000457.sf/en_GB/?ObjectPath=/Shops/950000457/Categories/Yamaha_Wiring_Loom_Connectors[1] *I noticed the link may shows a non-Suzuki brand but it'll show Suzuki connectors in the link Edited November 21, 2016 by Jaydee 1 Quote
coombehouse Posted November 21, 2016 Posted November 21, 2016 (edited) Have you looked to see if new looms are still available from Suzuki. I bought one a couple of years ago & it was quite reasonable. The loom was redesigned with modern wire too. A lot easier than making it & probably cheaper. Just checked. NLA. Guess I got lucky Edited November 22, 2016 by coombehouse talking rubbish Quote
Dezza Posted November 22, 2016 Posted November 22, 2016 2 hours ago, coombehouse said: Have you looked to see if new looms are still available from Suzuki. I bought one a couple of years ago & it was quite reasonable. The loom was redesigned with modern wire too. A lot easier than making it & probably cheaper. Just checked. NLA. Guess I got lucky I think Skelly is making a custom loom for his highly modified bike so a NOS loom may not be suitable. The materials to build your own loom are not expensive. The problems can be getting suitable connectors to go on OEM parts such as the high-quality fuse box used on Suzukis and the stock CDI unit, as Skelly has discovered. It takes much time to build a loom though and also it can induce a headache when simplifying a stock loom and/or using components from another model, like switches and clocks. When it all works in the end it is immensely satisfying though for not much monetary cost. I also have used VWP for bits and Towzatronics on Eblag are good too, especially for Japanese block connectors of different colours. Quote
skelly Posted November 25, 2016 Author Posted November 25, 2016 Exactly what @Dezza said. A new loom wouldn't help me much as I'm building my own. The connector I need is the same as a GS1000 R/H switchgear if that helps. Quote
Dezza Posted November 26, 2016 Posted November 26, 2016 13 hours ago, skelly said: Exactly what @Dezza said. A new loom wouldn't help me much as I'm building my own. The connector I need is the same as a GS1000 R/H switchgear if that helps. Could you post a picture of it? I for one do not know what was used on a GS1000 so if you post a pic me and probably others may know of where such a connector is available Quote
skelly Posted November 26, 2016 Author Posted November 26, 2016 Ok good plan. Here is a pic of the connector on the back of my clocks. The bit I need is on the loom and plugs into the connector in the photo. Hope that helps. Skel. Quote
Dezza Posted November 26, 2016 Posted November 26, 2016 Not seen one like that before. I take it they are Kat clocks? Is there freeplay behind the connector block on all 11 wires, like on the connector block on the efe clocks (the terminals in the efe clocks are different so the block holding the male connectors will not fit that one)? Your block holds up to 12 male bullet connectors. If there is freeplay behind the connector block, you may have to open the clocks, cut the block off, and fit two new mini-block connectors each with a capacity of 6 terminals. Does the GS 1000 switch unit have similar connections? If so, I think VWP do similar but if you are building a new loom, there is nothing to stop you fitting new japanese mini-block connectors on the cable from the switch and on the loom. These have been in use on Jap bikes now for decades. Quote
Gixer1460 Posted November 26, 2016 Posted November 26, 2016 If you can't find the correct plug I think i'd find the correct size male pins, crimp and solder to correct colour wires, push through a trimmed piece of thin plastic laid over the females into the right places, test they work electrically and cover the whole lot with hot melt glue to set in place. Once cooled / set the new 'plug connector can be removed, more glue added and all tidied up - hey presto - new connector! Quote
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