• 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.

Could a sh775 kill a stator?

  • Thread starter Thread starter harman84
  • Start date Start date
H

harman84

Guest
I got a used sh775 and installed it today and upon startup at idle I was getting over 13 volts. 14.1 at 4000 rpm's. I figured I had fixed the charging issue. I checked it again tonight and it was not charging. I checked the ac output on stator wires and 2 were around 50-55 volts and one had nothing. Could the rr killed my stator?

Before I installed the new rr I was getting over 80 volts on the stator. I hooked 3 yellow wires to the grey plug and red on inside black and ground on outside of the black plug. Any ideas? I don't want to get a new stator and have same result.
 
First question: Is it a real Sh775?
Second question: how long did you run the stator with a shunt R/r?

Regardless of the answer it is extremely remote that the sh775 caused any problem. Like you just won the lottery .
 
The rr has the right numbers stamped on the end so I think it is oem.
I probably ran it 15 minutes. I am going to pull the stator cover off and see if the stator looks burnt up. I did notice the rr was warm to the touch. it wasn't hot though. I believe my wire were hooked up right.
 
So I went and checked the charging system again after the bike sat for a few hours. upon first starting the engine I was getting 14.1 at 4000 rpm. The bike idled there for 2 minutes tops. I checked it again at 4000 rpm and was under 13 volts again. Not sure what to think now. I am going to check again this weekend when it stone cold.
 
Last edited:
The stator is probably going out. You did not mention doing the leg to leg tests at 5K RPM. These are usually the best tests.
You might get a better indication .

And here are some updates with background to the Phase B tests that focus on the stator alone.

A revised test is at this link; The actual test is on Page 6 of 9. We added the leg to ground AC voltage test as this helps isolate insulation breakdowns to ground using the relatively high 60-80 VAC stator voltage when it is open loop.
Link to Revised PHASE B of Stator Pages with discussion of testing methods:
http://www.keepandshare.com/doc/3977567/dummy-load-scanned-pdf-may-14-2012-8-24-pm-649k?da=y
 
Thanks. I will look at the revised tests some more tomorrow. I looked real quick and my head was starting to hurt. I sure its not that hard to figure the test out. It just was a lot to take in tonight.
 
exact same test as "leg to leg" just put one lead to case ground; You should see zero VAC whereas leg to leg is 80VAC.

You are checking for any evidence of a short in the winding that might occur at many places.
 
My brother has been a service writer for a polaris dealership for several years. They replace the exact reg/reg you guys recommend on this site all the time because they regularly fail and ruin stators. it's not any better than any other, and arguably worse. For the past year they have been recommending mosfet regrecs (aftermarket, which is not their norm because they are a dealership) and have concluded that they are superior.
 
My brother has been a service writer for a polaris dealership for several years. They replace the exact reg/reg you guys recommend on this site all the time because they regularly fail and ruin stators. it's not any better than any other, and arguably worse. For the past year they have been recommending mosfet regrecs (aftermarket, which is not their norm because they are a dealership) and have concluded that they are superior.

That is certainly an interesting comment. I know there are some bikes where there are recommendations for MOSFET R/R's when the stators DO NOT burn up. But if there is any evidence of burning stators then a SERIES R/R is the solution which can be one of a few on short list. The SH-775 is the cheapest.

I don' know if there is even one case where someone has had a stator failure using a SERIES R/R except if the stator had already been run using a shunt R/R or the stator had suffered a mechanical failure after many miles.

Maybe someone has their part numbers wrong?
 
They regularly fail, and they ruin stators. He and I just had a long discussion about it, and how the solution is mosfet

shunt r/rs work fine in many bikes. oem suzuki stators and regs are exception, always have been
 
They regularly fail, and they ruin stators. He and I just had a long discussion about it, and how the solution is mosfet

shunt r/rs work fine in many bikes. oem suzuki stators and regs are exception, always have been

If your are speaking of SH775's there is plenty of evidence that the statement above is incorrect as related to GS motorcycles. Are you referring to Polaris applications?
 
They regularly fail, and they ruin stators. He and I just had a long discussion about it, and how the solution is mosfet
"regularly fail...."

I've been using a sh-775 for 4 years now mated with a previously used stator- no problem at all. I'm sorta skeptical about Polaris having issues with the sh-775 , unless it involved stators having a greater output than shindengen's specs.
 
Be skeptical. All i can do is offer facts. They fail all the time. As much or more than others.

I mean, right here we are in a thread where the reg rec has likely caused an issue. Id expect more soon.

Mosfet is the way to go.
 
Last edited:
I will also disagree with your statement that the SH775 fails more than any other. I have owned my bike going on 7 years now and put almost 20000 miles on it since I bought in. In the first 4 years I owned it using a shunt regulator I had to replace the stator at least twice. Since I replaced the R/R in 2014, I have not had a single problem with my stator and charging continues to stay where it should be.

Yes, all mechanical things fail but to say these R/Rs fail more than the shunt regulators without providing actual documented proof does not lend credibility to your statement.

To point to this guy and say - see, it's crap - doesn't take into account the fact he said he replaced his old one with a used one. We also do not know if the stator was already burned out or at the least on its last legs. I think a better recommendation would have been to replace the stator and monitor both for awhile before declaring the R/R as the cause.
 
Cool.

...MOSFET...

Too busy working on my bike to care. Have a good day!
 
Be skeptical. All i can do is offer facts. They fail all the time. As much or more than others.

I mean, right here we are in a thread where the reg rec has likely caused an issue. Id expect more soon.

Mosfet is the way to go.

well,offer facts... How about your brother pointing out a Polaris service bulletin.. Otherwise you're just offering an opinion that many of us find suspect based on our experiences.
 
I got a used sh775 and installed it today and upon startup at idle I was getting over 13 volts. 14.1 at 4000 rpm's. I figured I had fixed the charging issue. I checked it again tonight and it was not charging. I checked the ac output on stator wires and 2 were around 50-55 volts and one had nothing. Could the rr killed my stator?

Before I installed the new rr I was getting over 80 volts on the stator. I hooked 3 yellow wires to the grey plug and red on inside black and ground on outside of the black plug. Any ideas? I don't want to get a new stator and have same result.

It's unlikely that your stator failed instantly because of the series type R/R as such. I don't have a series R/R but I can say that based on reading many posts...however your description of hookup gives me pause.... You might have done something wrong in the initial hookup.
Given it's correct, even then It's not unusual that replacing one bad component reveals flaws in the other components because the charging system is inter-dependent.

Also check connections carefully. Also, what bike is this? ie: do you have a "functioning" "headight loop"? stuff like this is stuff you will want to investigate.
 
I haven't had time to look at it today. I am thinking maybe my stator was going out. I only have the ground running in the stock wiring with another ground going to battery. The positive goes right to my solenoid which ties into my positive battery cable. I could put it back to stock if needed. Also it is on a 841100.
 
I haven't had time to look at it today. I am thinking maybe my stator was going out. I only have the ground running in the stock wiring with another ground going to battery. The positive goes right to my solenoid which ties into my positive battery cable. I could put it back to stock if needed. Also it is on a 841100.

Crappy connections will not cause the failure with an SH-775, only lower voltages. You should follow recommenced connections however.
 
maybe my stator was going out
yes, it sounds like it. I've yet to buy a 2nd hand Suzuki from the 80's without replacing the stator pretty soon after, but don't despair right away. They're easy to replace but expensive so try everything else first and be sure that's the problem.
....and of course sometimes you can limp along with a partially bad one and a disconnected headlight while you tune other things but it's risky riding anywhere in traffic without a headlight.
 
Back
Top