I guess I dont race my 14 enough, but I never seem to see the shift light. So I came up with an idea. About a year ago I bought strands of 12V LEDs, and wired them up above the windows in my Home theater room as back lighting. Well, I still had about 3 feet left over. So I had an idea. Put a short strip of them behind the bump on the top of the gauge cluster so you cant see them, and just reflect the light off the windscreen. I just finished this about 10 minutes ago, so I havent ridden with them yet, but honestly I rarely get close to redline, so besides testing them out, it might be awhile before I "need" them.
I took the gauge cluster apart, and started testing the board, and finding spots I could wire up. At first I just wired up the Positive lead to the OEM Shift light LED, and used a ground outside the cluster, and that wouldnt work, you have to use a grounding spot I found inside the cluster itself. After a little more testing, it works great.
Disclaimer: If you mess up your bike, or dont test this first, and mess your bike up, its your own damn fault.
Once you take the cluster apart, there are 4 pins on the LED, K,K,K, and A. I used A as the positive for my new LED strip. And about 1inch to the left, there are 2 solder points marked R60, I used the Left solder point as my ground.
Edit: I should of said, Im using the stock LED as a trigger for a relay, and the relay is hooked to the battery, so my LED strip is getting its amperage off the battery, not the stock LED.
Pic was taken before I slid the heat shrink on, and yes, it looks bad, my small soldering pin was at work, so I had to use my gun with the smallest tip I had.
LED strip across the back of the Gauges
LEDs turned off, you cant see them
Shift light and LEDs on Dim
Shift light and LEDs on Bright
And a quick Video, Shift light and LEDs set to Flash
* Last updated by: Kolk1 on 9/22/2012 @ 6:43 PM *
New build, Fresh re-plated block, Velocity Racing Turbo kit, JE Turbo pistons, P&P Head, and a whole lot more. Current on 8.5psi.
2013 White ZX-14R, Full Hindle exhaust, Puig DB screen, HIDs, drop pegs, bar risers, and so on, setting it up for touring.