ok pos,
I finally made it where the bike would run and went through the stator papers here are my numbers as follows
With new SPG, new wire and new connectors at every junction with soldering and crimping.
The positive lead voltage drop was 0.17
The negative lead voltage drop was 0.02
PHASE B
First ohm test results from legs are
1.2 per leg
1.2 per leg
1.3 per leg
Second test was OL
Given this information I need a stator? could this also be the reason my battery keeps draining?Third test with the AC Voltage on each leg i got
6.5 ACv
12 ACv
1.9 ACv
Sounds like a new stator and r/r will be on their way this week.
You may remember that I don't think much of using an ohm meter for stator tests (it does so little to actually test the stator) and the only tests that are useful for a stator are the VAC "leg to leg" and "leg to ground" tests. "Leg to ground" seems to be the best predictor of a failed stator.
In you case the 1.2 ohms across the board would indicate a "good" stator while teh AC leg to ground show teh stator is obviously cooked.
From this clear example, it should be clear that the ohmmeter tests are worse than worthless. They are exactly 180 degrees out WRONG.
I know the tests are in the stator pages, because:
- The OEM manuals have stator tests using an ohmmeter
- Frank left the ohmmeter tests into the stator pages as well as the R/R diode tests (not my decision, I would have left it out). His decision seemed to be that he was inclined to pay homage to the original stator pages rather than rewrite for improved troubleshooting efficiency. His specific comment was that it still applied to stock R/R's , knowingly or not that it does not apply to any more modern (SHUNT or SERIES R/R). When you couple the fact that it is a standard recommendation to switch to SERIES R/R or at the minimum a 6 wire Honda R/R. Leaving the stock 5wire SHUNT r/r tests in is adding more confusion that benefit.
Leg to ground should be zero VAC at any RPM especially 5K RPM.
More than likely what you are seeing is a stator that produces current at idle, but then starts to fail with higher RPM and heat. The result is a dead battery. Your R/R may or may not be good based on your measurements. To my mind it is academic as you should be changing to a SERIES unit.
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