joker9r
Member
Found a good write-up for checking your charging system and stator so I thought I'd post it.
Place a multi meter on the battery terminals and check for battery voltage, it should be around 12.5V.
2
Turn the key on and check battery voltage again. It should not have dropped more than .5V
3
Push the starter button while keeping an eye on the multimeter, it should not drop past 11.5V
4
Bring RPMs up to around 3000-3500, battery voltage should be between 13.5 and 14.5V. If voltage the rises and battery fails one of the first 3 tests, the battery is bad. If the voltage doesn't rise, or rises slightly, it could be the regulator/rectifier, or the stator that has given up the ghost.
5
Ok, so the battery is good, now to figure out if the regulator/rectifier or the stator has failed:
Unplug the stator leads from the reg/rec. There should be 3 wires, usually yellow or white.
6
Set multimeter on resistance scale(ohms Ω). Test resistance between each of the three wires coming off of the stator. 1-2, 2-3, 3-1. Resistance should be present, it will vary depending on type of stator. If there is no resistance between any two leads, the stator is bad.
7
Test the resistance of each wire to ground(any available motor bolt will do). There should be no resistance, you should get the infinity symbol (∞), or OL depending on the multimeter. If there is resistance between any lead and ground, stator is bad.
8
Set the multimeter to volts AC. Start motorcycle and check voltage between each of the three leads coming off the stator at 3000RPM. The AC voltage should be between 75 and 150 volts AC.
9
If the stator passes all tests, the regulator is bad.
Place a multi meter on the battery terminals and check for battery voltage, it should be around 12.5V.
2
Turn the key on and check battery voltage again. It should not have dropped more than .5V
3
Push the starter button while keeping an eye on the multimeter, it should not drop past 11.5V
4
Bring RPMs up to around 3000-3500, battery voltage should be between 13.5 and 14.5V. If voltage the rises and battery fails one of the first 3 tests, the battery is bad. If the voltage doesn't rise, or rises slightly, it could be the regulator/rectifier, or the stator that has given up the ghost.
5
Ok, so the battery is good, now to figure out if the regulator/rectifier or the stator has failed:
Unplug the stator leads from the reg/rec. There should be 3 wires, usually yellow or white.
6
Set multimeter on resistance scale(ohms Ω). Test resistance between each of the three wires coming off of the stator. 1-2, 2-3, 3-1. Resistance should be present, it will vary depending on type of stator. If there is no resistance between any two leads, the stator is bad.
7
Test the resistance of each wire to ground(any available motor bolt will do). There should be no resistance, you should get the infinity symbol (∞), or OL depending on the multimeter. If there is resistance between any lead and ground, stator is bad.
8
Set the multimeter to volts AC. Start motorcycle and check voltage between each of the three leads coming off the stator at 3000RPM. The AC voltage should be between 75 and 150 volts AC.
9
If the stator passes all tests, the regulator is bad.