Jump to content

Alpina 138 brake light switch


Thumbs up!
 Share

Recommended Posts

Hey Guy's,I have a 138 I have been sorting out and I am not sure if I have the correct brake light switch?

When I apply the brake pedal it extends  the switch pin and opens the circuit so when your foot it not on the brake pedal the switch is compressed and the circuit is closed,does that make sense?IMG_1054_zps036971de.jpg.bccb9b3f9f9c8a3a16f0ac7743e272c1.jpgIMG_0497.thumb.JPG.67ec6bbed861017ade56eb7bcf428329.JPG

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

Hi, it seems to be the wrong switch. With the pin in it should be open circuit, pressing the brake pedal allows the pin out, completing the circuit, the brake light works. What is needed is a reverse light switch as used on pretty much any car. If you have a decent auto parts store near you, call in and see if you can find a suitable one. Take a multimeter with you, set to the diode range, be sure the contacts close when the pin is out. Hope this helps........

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

Hi , Thumbs Up - 

If your Alpina is wired as per original direct lighting , the stop lamp circuit is via the "earth/ground " side of the ignition feed coil in the magneto.

Quote from an earlier posting on the subject:-

. The switch is of an unusal design and exact replacments can not be found. The original switch is held in a normaly closed condition by a tag on the brake pedal and switches to normaly open when the pedal is depressed. 

Ignore the previous response - you do have the correct switch.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

 
9 hours ago, johnjsy said:

Hi, it seems to be the wrong switch. With the pin in it should be open circuit, pressing the brake pedal allows the pin out, completing the circuit, the brake light works. What is needed is a reverse light switch as used on pretty much any car. If you have a decent auto parts store near you, call in and see if you can find a suitable one. Take a multimeter with you, set to the diode range, be sure the contacts close when the pin is out. Hope this helps........

 

8 hours ago, lorenzo said:

Hi , Thumbs Up - 

If your Alpina is wired as per original direct lighting , the stop lamp circuit is via the "earth/ground " side of the ignition feed coil in the magneto.

Quote from an earlier posting on the subject:-

. The switch is of an unusal design and exact replacments can not be found. The original switch is held in a normaly closed condition by a tag on the brake pedal and switches to normaly open when the pedal is depressed. 

Ignore the previous response - you do have the correct switch.

Thanks for the replies Guy's, I will have to find a image of the wiring diagram to wrap my head around this type of system.

Lorenzo, does this switch look like it is an original OE switch that Bultaco would have used or a replacement,the switch had no continuity but after using some electrical spray cleaner it is working again.

Edited by Thumbs up!
Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

Hi,  Thumbs Up - 

 I have no direct experience of model 138 and am making a few assumptions here,,,,,,my own Alpina is an earlier model.

Looks to me like an OE switch, though.

If it's direct  (AC) lighting - no battery and no rectification - it should be wired similar to this :-

post-13295-0-11436800-1431173866_thumb.jpg

Hope this helps. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

Hi Lorenzo,

As I understand it AC is Alternating Current and DC is Direct Current.Yesterday I used an ohm meter and applied it to the yellow wire from the engine case and got current to the green wire at the taillight,then I connected the two wires at the brake light switch I got power at the black wire and green wire at the brake light. In my mind that tells me the tail light is on when the engine is running and the brake light is on also when the brake light switch is in the closed position (pin compressed and brake pedal not being applied).

The tail lamp has been modified at some point and had a single filament bulb and socket in it,would this not supposed to be a dual filament bulb and socket originally?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

I found this simple diagram for the switch that confirms the switch is normally closed and uses a path with a resisitor when open.Does this connector look like the spot where the resistor would plug in? Also note this bike does have a battery compartment.IMG_0570.thumb.JPG.bce083962e8f4672abd11c3fba1ef742.JPGIMG_0575.thumb.JPG.53018bf63bc8f61528385a4502b48184.JPGIMG_0571.thumb.JPG.515c39383acfed15c82e937ce7fc3dde.JPGIMG_0577.thumb.JPG.f4d60053bd4c78f4e87b02145725e2d6.JPG

Thanks in advance!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 
  • 1 year later...
 

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
 Share

×
  • Create New...