I said the answer was in the Manual and so I pulled a page from the 80-83 GS1100E manual. I think it is in most of the 16V manual I have. The electricity works the same weather it is 16V or 8V or whether the R is separated from the /R in the R/R.
Below I have drawn in the complete circuit of how electrons flow in a circuit. The stator actually has 3 legs that are would so that each leg reaches a maximum voltage (push) at different angles of the rotor (motor) and so they are nominally out of phase by 120 degrees (360/3=120). However we can look at the basic flow of current through the full wave rectifier. The diodes simply block current from flowing if they are reverse biased. That means hey will only flow in one direction and only when the voltage is higher on the back side of the arrow.
Without knowing anything about the 3 phase, we can draw a cut set at the output of the R/R and see that anything coming from the R/R has to return and this is shown explicitly by the little arrow coming up from ground in the manual into the R/R(-) lead.
Makes you think a little...... So if all the current has to get back to the R/R (-), how is mine wired? Is it grounded to a rubber mounted side plate? If I'm running all of my grounds back to the negative side of the battery, How does the current get back to the R/R(-)? More on this later.
Here is another picture from the GS1100E manual (Charging System). I have also drawn in the electrical circuit and cut sets when the R/R is regulating. Again I'm simply highlighting what the manual is already describing just to make it more obvious. So when the R/R sense too much voltage at it's output, it crowbars the stator. That means it shorts the stator and just sends the current back letting it get hotter and keeping all of its own juice. So while there is a "short to ground", the short only exists inside of the R/R and never leaves the output terminals of our cut set. Does the R/R get hotter yes, because now we have not only two diodes dropping voltage but also a SCR. But the stator is getting even hotter. And a nice cool oil bath at 220 degrees is very cool and refreshing to keep it from burning up it's insulation.
So what do you think happens when there is a bad connection between the R/R (+) and the rest of the system? Well the R/R(+) tries to push current but the high resistance causes the voltage at the R/R(+) to go to the stator output because it is as if there is no load attached and no voltage drop. So in response the R/R simply shorts the stator to say "sorry we dont need any more from you". In which the stator responds "man is it getting hot around here?" to which the R/R say "Yea I'm feeling it too" . Of course this is only temporary as your battery is dying from lack of charging and you hope you shut the engine off before you fry the stator and the R/R together.
Below I have drawn in the complete circuit of how electrons flow in a circuit. The stator actually has 3 legs that are would so that each leg reaches a maximum voltage (push) at different angles of the rotor (motor) and so they are nominally out of phase by 120 degrees (360/3=120). However we can look at the basic flow of current through the full wave rectifier. The diodes simply block current from flowing if they are reverse biased. That means hey will only flow in one direction and only when the voltage is higher on the back side of the arrow.
Without knowing anything about the 3 phase, we can draw a cut set at the output of the R/R and see that anything coming from the R/R has to return and this is shown explicitly by the little arrow coming up from ground in the manual into the R/R(-) lead.
Makes you think a little...... So if all the current has to get back to the R/R (-), how is mine wired? Is it grounded to a rubber mounted side plate? If I'm running all of my grounds back to the negative side of the battery, How does the current get back to the R/R(-)? More on this later.
Here is another picture from the GS1100E manual (Charging System). I have also drawn in the electrical circuit and cut sets when the R/R is regulating. Again I'm simply highlighting what the manual is already describing just to make it more obvious. So when the R/R sense too much voltage at it's output, it crowbars the stator. That means it shorts the stator and just sends the current back letting it get hotter and keeping all of its own juice. So while there is a "short to ground", the short only exists inside of the R/R and never leaves the output terminals of our cut set. Does the R/R get hotter yes, because now we have not only two diodes dropping voltage but also a SCR. But the stator is getting even hotter. And a nice cool oil bath at 220 degrees is very cool and refreshing to keep it from burning up it's insulation.
So what do you think happens when there is a bad connection between the R/R (+) and the rest of the system? Well the R/R(+) tries to push current but the high resistance causes the voltage at the R/R(+) to go to the stator output because it is as if there is no load attached and no voltage drop. So in response the R/R simply shorts the stator to say "sorry we dont need any more from you". In which the stator responds "man is it getting hot around here?" to which the R/R say "Yea I'm feeling it too" . Of course this is only temporary as your battery is dying from lack of charging and you hope you shut the engine off before you fry the stator and the R/R together.