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BRITISH COLUMBIA CLASSIC MOTORCYCLE CLUB
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Author Topic: stator  (Read 2796 times)
Steve G.
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« Reply #15 on: June 14, 2024, 04:00:44 PM »

Steve, I found a piece of alloy to mount your new regulator. 6”x3”x1/4” thick. Will that do, if so I will bring it to coffee next Wednesday.

  Actually, it’s as close to perfect as I can imagine!! And 1/4” thick, truly perfect!!! Thank you!!!
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Garage Residents:
'74 Honda CT70
'74 Norton 850 Interstate
'81 Laverda Jota Mk11 180
'89 Honda RC30
'91 BMW R100GS
'08 Honda XR650L
'08 BMW R1200GS

Previous Garage Residents
 1966 Keystone Tas 50
 1981 Can-Am 250 MX6
 1966 BSA 250 Starfire
 1972 Triumph 650 hardtail chopper
 1976 Honda 400-4 Supersport
 1982 Can-Am 500 Sonic
 1982 Suzuki SP500
 1984 Kawasaki KZ 750 L4
 1979 Honda CBX
 1988 Ducati 750 Paso 750 Euro
 1972 Suzuki 750 GT ‘Kettle’
 1972 Kawasaki 750 H2
 1993 BMW R100GSPD
 1984 Honda CR500
 1979 Honda CBX sandcast
 1975 Honda 400-4 SS
 2001 Moto Guzzi V11 Sport
 2006 Yamaha FJR 1300
1972 Norton Combat Roadster 810
 1972 BMW R75/2 SWB
 1980 Honda CBX
 1970 Honda Trail 50 K1
Steve G.
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« Reply #16 on: July 17, 2024, 09:45:47 PM »

As per Johns request, here's the list I've got:

  Charlie's Place

 Grant Tiller

 Parts n More
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Garage Residents:
'74 Honda CT70
'74 Norton 850 Interstate
'81 Laverda Jota Mk11 180
'89 Honda RC30
'91 BMW R100GS
'08 Honda XR650L
'08 BMW R1200GS

Previous Garage Residents
 1966 Keystone Tas 50
 1981 Can-Am 250 MX6
 1966 BSA 250 Starfire
 1972 Triumph 650 hardtail chopper
 1976 Honda 400-4 Supersport
 1982 Can-Am 500 Sonic
 1982 Suzuki SP500
 1984 Kawasaki KZ 750 L4
 1979 Honda CBX
 1988 Ducati 750 Paso 750 Euro
 1972 Suzuki 750 GT ‘Kettle’
 1972 Kawasaki 750 H2
 1993 BMW R100GSPD
 1984 Honda CR500
 1979 Honda CBX sandcast
 1975 Honda 400-4 SS
 2001 Moto Guzzi V11 Sport
 2006 Yamaha FJR 1300
1972 Norton Combat Roadster 810
 1972 BMW R75/2 SWB
 1980 Honda CBX
 1970 Honda Trail 50 K1
Wheels
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« Reply #17 on: July 20, 2024, 10:05:52 AM »

As Ross mentioned on another thread Mrs Wheels is having charging problems on her 1981 CB650 Four.   At coffee this week it was mentioned to replace the  regulator/rectifier with it  being the easiest and cheapest possible fix over the stator and rotor.
At the same time i am getting a reading of 5 ohms on the rotor itself which I believe is too high of a reading.  Bike runs fine and only discharges the battery after about an hour of riding with the headlights on.  My understanding is even the bike when new had low readings from the start as the factory did not make a very good unit and could barely maintain its battery from the get go.  I see where we replaced the rotor two years ago here but now thinking that replacement rotor might not have been good from the beginning and it only took a long ride for us to notice the battery becoming dead.

Battery is good so now I believe if correct that it must be one of three things, regulator/rectifier,  stator and rotor.  Plus also checking and cleaning the wiring of the unit.

Any further input is welcome as this is a great bike when running properly.
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Wheels
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« Reply #18 on: July 20, 2024, 03:34:09 PM »

Thanks for the list Steve and we have been on all four sites and looks like if necessary we can get all three required items and then when they fail to work just leave the garage and go out and have a fit! 
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hardrockminer
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« Reply #19 on: July 20, 2024, 07:52:31 PM »

I don't know much about the Honda charging systems but on the Kawasakis the rotor is on the crankshaft.  The stator sits inside the left engine cover and it's wires go into the rectifier.  If Honda's system is the same you would not be measuring the rotor resistance. 

The old bikes generated just enough power to run the lights and that's about it.  Kawasakis run around 45 to 55 volts per phase but at fairly low amps.  I think they are tested at 4,000 rpm but maybe my memory is faulty. I think once converted and supplied to the motorcycle electrics they only provide around 250 watts.  So if you're trying to run anything extra like heated gloves it's probably too much for the charging system.

My thought would be to measure voltage from phase to phase on the stator.  If it meets the spec then you are probably getting all you can get. 
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Past rides include a 1973 Suzuki GT380 & a 1975 Kawasaki Z1B

I currently ride a 1975 Kawasaki Z1B - Classic Plated
I also ride a 1980 Kawasaki KZ 1000 LTD - Classic Plated, and a 2006 Honda Goldwing with a Daytona 2+2 sidecar

My Sweetums rides a 2019 Suzuki DR650
Hawkeye
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If you can't get one, make one.


« Reply #20 on: July 20, 2024, 08:04:43 PM »

A common issue on older Hondas is the connector where the alternator wiring joins the main wiring harness. The terminals in Honda connectors were made of un-plated copper or brass. Over the years, the terminals become oxidized, which increases the resistance of the connections. This causes the terminals to heat up, further adding to the oxidation, further increasing the resistance ... Eventually, the plastic bodies of the connectors start to melt.

On nearly every bike I've put on the road, I've replaced the original connector with a screw-terminal strip, with a shot of corrosion preventive sealant in each barrel. Still easy to disconnect when removing the engine, but very good at holding off the oxidation.
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Mike
___________________________________

Past: '77 Honda 400 Four Super Sport
        '79 Honda 750K
        Honda CT70
        '78 XS400
        '81 Honda GL1100 (Collector Plate) (x2)
Present: '66 Honda CT200 Trail 90
             '77 Honda 750 Four K
             '83 Honda GL1100 (Collector Plate)
             '83 Honda 750 Shadow (Collector Plate)
Future: '77 Honda 400 Four Super Sport
Wheels
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« Reply #21 on: July 22, 2024, 08:51:49 AM »

Thank you for the input everyone.   Will update once cured and on the road.
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Bucko
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« Reply #22 on: July 24, 2024, 06:20:40 PM »

A bit late to the table on this... 

Your rotor resistance seems a bit high, but before doing anything drastic, try measuring with another meter.  Unless you have a really good meter, the meter's 'error spec' could be as much as a few ohms so when measuring low ohm devices (like the rotors in these bikes), the resulting measurement may be way off.  And, be sure to zero out the ohmmeter before making the measurement, if you can, or if you can't, make a note of the resistance measurement of just the probes and subtract that from your rotor measurement.

The common problem with these rotors is that with high speed spinning, the wires chafe and eventually short out (resistance would measure less than the spec) which reduces the rotor's magnetic field, which in turn reduces the stators AC output.  To compensate, the R/R passes more current into the rotor to try to increase the Rotor's magnetic field.  Eventually the R/R overloads from passing too much current to the shorted rotor and it burns out.  The R/R can be tested but you need two batteries or a variable power-supply (with at least several volts more than 12v available). 

Of course, the rotor can also fail with a broken wire, i.e. 'open circuit', but that easy to diagnose. 
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Wheels
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« Reply #23 on: July 24, 2024, 10:00:28 PM »

Thanks Dave.   If anything I will take this as a learning curve
Electricity is not my skill and I am surprised mom and dad did not name me Lucas
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Tripleted
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« Reply #24 on: July 25, 2024, 12:24:54 PM »

FYI…Jameson Mc Murray has a nice original 77 XL 350 with original muffler in nice shape and original signal etc for $1500 if anyone is interested. 
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Past rides as best I can remember 1960's Tiger cycle Briggs engined mini bike, Yamaha YG-1, Suzuki 90 cc, Honda mini trail, Honda CT 70, Yamaha Big Bear scrambler (Dad's), 1967 Bridgestone, Suzuki X6 Hustler (Dad's), Suzuki Titan 500,Honda 50 Honda 55 Honda 90, 1973 Kawasaki H1D, 1973 Kawasaki H2A, 1971 CB 750 K1, 1976 KH 500 A8, 1975 H2C(many),1972 H2(many), 1969-75 H1's(many), Honda CB750's(many), Kawasaki Z1 900's, Honda CB 400's, three Honda CBX's, Kawasaki A1SS, A7SS, Yamaha RT-3 360cc, Honda CT 70's, two Honda Z50M's, Ducati 860 GTS, 1996 Buell S2T, 2006 Yamaha TW200, 2000 Buell X1, 2006 VRSCR Harley Vrod, 1982 Honda  CT 110, 1978 CT 90, 1978 Kawasaki Z1R, 2018 Africa Twin, 1987 Yamaha BW 350 Big Wheel, 2018 Honda Africa Twin.
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