First, big thanks to John, Matt, George, Steve, Mike and Mark who contributed time to help me instead of riding, eating breakfast, or visiting with other attendees. Also, thanks to Tim and Joe for having R/Rs available as spares for me to use. Joe even loaned me a stator, just in case. Thanks again to Steve for hauling the bike back to Ohio for me.
Here's the story, as concise as I can make it. The stator tests OK if marginal: just under 60 Vac at 3500 rpm, and 0.8 Ohms on all 3 legs. All the wiring associated with the charging system seems to be in order (visual inspection). The R/Rs were all grounded directly to the battery, and the the outputs connected directly to the positive post on the starter relay. My R/R simply didn't charge. We didn't examine it. Tim's R/R was never observed to charge, but it passed all the diode tests. Joe's R/R seemed to be working, with good charging voltage. Within 30 seconds (by my memory), as we checked higher rpm, the voltage on the battery climbed to 15 V, then fell to 12.6 V. The R/R was blistering hot, and so were the stator wires.
Other symptoms that appeared on Friday, but may be red herrings: the start button intermittently failed to work. The engine stumbled hard at 7k, before continuing strongly to redline under load. Saturday morning had a weak spark and had to be bump started.
In retrospect, I had quite a few clues that something was wrong. Procedurally, we probably should not have assumed that a solid state device (even a GS R/R) "just blew", without investigating causes. My question is this: What are possible causes of destroying R/Rs like this? Some of the brightest GSR minds were in attendance, and we had no immediate idea where to look. We were out of R/Rs anyway.
My own best theory so far is some kind of unfused short to ground of the charging wire. The battery is charging tonight, I can start testing tomorrow evening, I hope. What do you all think?
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