• Required reading for all forum users!!!

    Welcome!
    Register to access the full functionality of the GSResources forum. Until you register and activate your account you will not have full forum access, nor will you be able to post or reply to messages.

    A note to new registrants...
    All new forum registrations must be activated via email before you have full access to the forum.

    A Special Note about Email accounts!
    DO NOT SIGN UP USING hotmail, outlook, gmx, sbcglobal, att, bellsouth or email.com. They delete our forum signup emails.

    A note to old forum members...
    I receive numerous requests from people who can no longer log in because their accounts were deleted. As mentioned in the forum FAQ, user accounts are deleted if you haven't logged in for the past 6 months. If you can't log in, then create a new forum account. If you don't get an error message, then check your email account for an activation message. If you get a message stating that the email address is already in use, then your account still exists so follow the instructions in the forum FAQ for resetting your password.

    Have you forgotten your password or have a new email address? Then read the forum FAQ for details on how to reset it.

    Any email requests for "can't log in anymore" problems or "lost my password" problems will be deleted. Read the forum FAQ and follow the instructions there - that's what we have one for...

  • Returning Visitors

    If you are a returning visitor who never received your confirmation email, then odds are your email provider is blockinig emails from our server. The only thing that can be done to get around this is you will have to try creating another forum account using an email address from another domain.

    If you are a returning visitor to the forum and can't log in using your old forum name and password but used to be able to then chances are your account is deleted. Purges of the databases are done regularly. You will have to create a new forum account and you should be all set.

New regulator, stator tests good, but low charging voltage

  • Thread starter Thread starter Paul.S
  • Start date Start date
P

Paul.S

Guest
My 82 GS1100E is not charging like it should. When I first start the bike and it is at a high idle it produces 13.3V. Once I idle it down to 1200-1400 rpm, it drops to 12.4 volts. I just put a new Compu-fire 40A regulator on it with both leads going directly to the battery terminals. Then I used a good weatherpack 3 pin connector to connect to the stator leads. I measure just 14 millivolts drop across the weatherpack connector on each pin so the connector is making good contact. I also checked for voltage drop on the 2 wires going to battery and no voltage drop is present. With the stator wires unplugged, I get 20V AC at idle and more than 80V AC revved up high. All 3 legs produce the same voltage. I did the test with one meter lead on ground and the other on each of the 3 stator leads while running and I got 0V AC on each stator wire. The stator wires ohm the same to each other and have infinity resiatance to ground. When I connect stator wires to Regulator, the AC voltage drops from 20V at idle to 10V at idle. So, I think I either have a weak stator or a weak rotor. I did notice there is a small crack on the very outer edge of one of the rotor magnets but all the magnets still have lots of magnetism. Any ideas or just roll the dice and pick one?
 
Your battery is probably low which is pulling your numbers down. Do the Quick Test.
 
Did you wire the stator directly into the R/R, bypassing the factory wiring? If not, this is first thing I'd do. Also understand that the charging voltage should be tested at 5000 rpm, not idle.

One other comment is that no load AC voltage tests on stators is not definitive. I had two different stators that made 75+ VAC but only pushed 13.7 VDC to the battery. Bit the bullet and got a new stator and charging voltage went up to 14.5 VDC like it should be.
 
I forgot to add I tested the battery with a nice electronic battery tester and it tests 100CCA over what it is rated at. I have also tried 3 different regulators. 2 brand new compu-fire units and 1 original new shunt-style unit. They all produce low voltage. And yes, all factory wiring and connectors have been replaced.
 
I think I found the problem. It appears my bike has the wrong rotor. All the pics on ebay of the correct part # rotor and the factory service manual show the rotor to have 6 rivets on the back. Mine has 9 and mine also has 4 seperate magnets. Im not sure as the pictures are blurry but it appears it might only have 1-2 magnets from the factory. So, I found a listing on Ebay for a NOS rotor and stator out of Finland (very expensive) and bought them. I will update once installed. 2018-04-22 14.51.18.jpg
 
Looks like I have a rotor for a GS1100ESD model but mine is the GS1100EZ model. Im sure it would work if it had a ESD stator but it is going back original so parts are not all mixed up.
 
IIRC 83 ED has big end cranks and most 82 EZ are small end. If you had an 83 rotor on yours then your 82 is a rare one with big end crank.

If you just bought a 82 rotor it probably will not fit the big end crank.

The 83 rotors and 82 rotor magnet count is all the same.

CCA is not irrelevant but hard to deduce from that why your voltage is low.
 
IIRC 83 ED has big end cranks and most 82 EZ are small end. If you had an 83 rotor on yours then your 82 is a rare one with big end crank.

If you just bought a 82 rotor it probably will not fit the big end crank.

The 83 rotors and 82 rotor magnet count is all the same.

CCA is not irrelevant but hard to deduce from that why your voltage is low.

How can I tell if I have a big end crank? The crank has been welded/polished/balanced/shot peened at Falicon by previous owner so it might not be an 82 crank. I cant get the rotor off either until the rotor puller gets here later this week.
 
The prevoius owner did mention in the craiglist ad that the alternator shaft and bearing were upgraded when the crank was worked on at Falicon. So, I guess I do have that big end crank. And therefore the rotor would of course be different. Are the stators the same between the big end/small end cranks?
 
If you go the electro sport you will see all 16v 750/1100 engines use the same stator do all the magnet counts on the Toyota are compatiable.

if you spent 5 min and did the Quick Tedt you would probably get your answer . It is in my signature.
 
I did some research and found the 9 rivet rotors are found solely on the big end cranks. The part # for the stator is also different when using the big end crank rotor vs the small end crank rotor. So I just ordered another NOS big end crank rotor and matching stator. Thanks for the info posplayr! Hopefully I can get the guy in Finland to cancel my prevoius order or I will have some parts to sell... Also, I read through your charging system quick test and I have pretty much covered what you have laid out in the test so my problem should be in the rotor or stator.
 
I did some research and found the 9 rivet rotors are found solely on the big end cranks. The part # for the stator is also different when using the big end crank rotor vs the small end crank rotor. So I just ordered another NOS big end crank rotor and matching stator. Thanks for the info posplayr! Hopefully I can get the guy in Finland to cancel my prevoius order or I will have some parts to sell... Also, I read through your charging system quick test and I have pretty much covered what you have laid out in the test so my problem should be in the rotor or stator.


I doubt it.
 
The stator is same between 1982 and 1983, so that means what rotor is used won't matter.

From the parts fishe...

This Suzuki 31401-09300 STATOR fits the following models and components:

Suzuki Motorcycle 1982 GS1100ES GENERATOR (GS1100ESD)

Suzuki Motorcycle 1982 GS1100ES GENERATOR (GS1100EZ/ED)

Suzuki Motorcycle 1982 CRUISER - GS1100GL Generator

Suzuki Motorcycle 1982 GS1100E GENERATOR (GS1100ESD)

Suzuki Motorcycle 1982 CRUISER - GS1100G Generator

Suzuki Motorcycle 1982 GS1100E GENERATOR (GS1100EZ/ED)

Suzuki Motorcycle 1983 GS1100ES GENERATOR (GS1100EZ/ED)

Suzuki Motorcycle 1983 GS1100E GENERATOR (GS1100ESD)

Suzuki Motorcycle 1983 GS1100G Generator

Suzuki Motorcycle 1983 GS1100E GENERATOR (GS1100EZ/ED)

Suzuki Motorcycle 1983 GS1100ES GENERATOR (GS1100ESD)

Suzuki Motorcycle 1983 KATANA - GS1100GL Generator

Suzuki Motorcycle 1983 TURBO - XN85-D Generator
 
If you go to Suzukipartshouse.com and look at the exploded diagrams, they list 2 different rotors and 2 different stators for the 82-83 model 1100. They also list 2 different crankshaft ends where the rotor presses on. The rotor that has the 9 rivets is listed for the D model and the D model also has a different stator. The D model (big end crank) has rotor 31402-49330, and stator 31401-09300. The Z model (small end crank) has rotor 31402-49310, and stator 31401-49310.
 
If you go to Suzukipartshouse.com and look at the exploded diagrams, they list 2 different rotors and 2 different stators for the 82-83 model 1100. They also list 2 different crankshaft ends where the rotor presses on. The rotor that has the 9 rivets is listed for the D model and the D model also has a different stator. The D model (big end crank) has rotor 31402-49330, and stator 31401-09300. The Z model (small end crank) has rotor 31402-49310, and stator 31401-49310.

Unless you are doing a factory restoration (including a welded crank on an EZ) that is functionally irrelevant information.
 
could the oem stator in new condition with new rotor produce greeter than 12.4 at off idle?

It depends. On my 1983 GS1100E with a fresh stator and OEM rotor, the balance point between charging and discharging was somewhere around 1200 RPM. For a fresh battery that means the output voltage is about 12.8V in which case nothing is being pushed to the battery. The voltage will rise rapidly above that RPM and you might be well in excess of 13V by the time you hit 1400 RPM. See typical numbers form the Quick test proceedure.

Quick Test Steps:

1.) key off................Normal 12.7 volts-12.9 volts

2.) key on (but not cranking with lights for 10 sec).....Normal 12.2-12.5 volts

3.) at idle (1500 rpm).....12.6volts - 13.2volts

4.) at 2500 rpm 13.5 -14.0 volts

5.) at 5000 rpm.....14.0 -15.0 volts

6.) key off.....slightly higher than measurements # 1 (12.8-13.0 v)
 
Update: I found out my rotor magnet was not cracked. These rotors have 12 magnets in them not 4 like I thought. The 4 magnet looking things you see are like a plastic cover or something that goes over the magnets to keep them in place. It was that cover that was cracked, not the magnet. So, I did not change my rotor. I then compared the new Suzuki gs1150 stator to my old one and realized the old stator was a different brand as it had different colored wires and different numbers stamped into it. It was probably an off brand. So, with the new stator and compu-fire regulator I have 12.5V at idle high beam and about 12.6-12.7 idle low beam. At 5000 rpm low beam it is about 13.3 and slowly climbing (I only held it at 5000 for about 3 seconds). I forgot to mention the last stator would drop to less than 12V after a drive so it should be fixed as I tested the new one when hot. Also, check out how nice these weatherpack terminals turned out on the stator wires. I bought the tool made by delphi for the weatherpack connectors. It crimps the seal and wire all in one step. Worked great!
 

Attachments

  • 2018-04-28 15.07.08.jpg
    2018-04-28 15.07.08.jpg
    83.5 KB · Views: 0
You should flow some solder into those crimps; without mine got hot after about s year

the relationship between charging voltages in the quick test provides a good infication of charging health.
 
Back
Top