Hey Curtis. If the fuse didn't blow when you ran the test I described in post 22 then obviously you haven't found the problem. I don't know if a faulty regulator would blow the fuse or not, but let's do another test.
Plug the stator into the regulator, and plug in the wire connecting the regulator to the battery (let's call this the battery wire). Crank it up and test for DC voltage at the battery wire. You will connect one lead to the battery wire and the other to a ground - the same way you measure the voltage in your battery. Use the sharp point of your probe to penetrate the insulation to reach the wire, or perhaps you can make a jump wire to use at the connection and strip some insulation off of it for easier testing (don't let it touch ground). While testing, have someone rev the engine and the voltage should climb as the engine speeds up. I don't know exactly what voltage range you should see, but I would expect 12 to 14, maybe even up to 16. If you read only 12 volts or slightly more, it isn't charging (the reading would just be battery voltage)
If you aren't charging, then test the stator. Set you multimeter to read AC voltage. Unplug the two wires coming from the stator and crank it up. Touch your test leads to the two wires on the stator side and you should read AC voltage if it's charging. May need to rev the engine just a bit. I don't know what the reading should be, but maybe 25 to 30 volts AC. If you don't get a reading or only get a small reading, the stator is bad. You should do some research and try to find out what the AC voltage should read.
If you regulator test shows that the system is charging, then you are back to trying to find out what blew the fuse.
Plug the stator into the regulator, and plug in the wire connecting the regulator to the battery (let's call this the battery wire). Crank it up and test for DC voltage at the battery wire. You will connect one lead to the battery wire and the other to a ground - the same way you measure the voltage in your battery. Use the sharp point of your probe to penetrate the insulation to reach the wire, or perhaps you can make a jump wire to use at the connection and strip some insulation off of it for easier testing (don't let it touch ground). While testing, have someone rev the engine and the voltage should climb as the engine speeds up. I don't know exactly what voltage range you should see, but I would expect 12 to 14, maybe even up to 16. If you read only 12 volts or slightly more, it isn't charging (the reading would just be battery voltage)
If you aren't charging, then test the stator. Set you multimeter to read AC voltage. Unplug the two wires coming from the stator and crank it up. Touch your test leads to the two wires on the stator side and you should read AC voltage if it's charging. May need to rev the engine just a bit. I don't know what the reading should be, but maybe 25 to 30 volts AC. If you don't get a reading or only get a small reading, the stator is bad. You should do some research and try to find out what the AC voltage should read.
If you regulator test shows that the system is charging, then you are back to trying to find out what blew the fuse.
Comment