EDITED: 7/25/2015 Most all of these clamp on meters are only intended for 50-60 hz; I mis read the spec and the 400Hz was for voltage not current. It should still work as Toms results indicate.
I have mentioned this a few times here and Tom203 has actually done it, but I don't think there is a lot of awareness. While checking the charging system on your bikes has gotten much easier and better (see The Quick Test and other updates to the New stator pages) Stator winding testing (see Phase B of the stator tests) is still a bit of a hit of miss deal. A positive tests result is inconclusive, and only a negative tests result is conclusive.
For example if you use a 3V battery in a Ohm meter to excite the stator to see if it is shorted and you find a short, the 3V was enough to puncture the insulation and yes indeed you can assume the stator is bad. On the other hand, if you do the tests and it comes back positive, you know nothing!
That is because at 10V or 40V or at 100V the insulation might actually break down and confirm the stator is bad. So until keep upping the voltage and get a bad result, you don't know anything(this is what a MEGGER is for;there are cheap ones of these as well on Ebay), unless of course if the tests is performed at full load.
Any of these things will probably serve it's purpose even those it is being used in a way that is well beyond it's stated capabilities.
The phase B tests are also relatively high voltage tests but without much current. The stator AC should be about 80 V (at 5K RPM) and compare that to the typical lowest voltage setting on a MEGGER of about 250V.
As is true of almost any electrical circuit, testing at full load is best as it comes closest to actual operating conditions; it usually does not suffer the same kind of gotchas of other more indirect tests. The main issue in the past is actually finding a cheap way to measure AC current in the statro windings. I have a rather expensive scope with current clamp which is how I have done many of my measurements, but it turns out that a clamp on AC voltmeter also does a good job for this application. So while it has been know, few have probably done it, but there is really no good reason not to as you can probably do the tests using a $14 HF clamp on meter.
I was hoping someone would have bought one of the cheap HF clamp on volt meters to see if you can detect loaded current imbalance in the stator winding. I know Tom203 confirmed his SH-775 SERIES mode operation using one he had, just not sure if the model/quality exceeded the HF models to the point they would not work for this application.
http://www.harborfreight.com/clamp-o...ter-95683.html
If you have a digital voltmeter and just ride around, carry the clamp on meter with you. If you notice the voltage is dropping, then your the clamp on to confirm imbalance and you can be pretty well assured that the stator is going out.
Actually the frequency range is pretty narrow 50-60Hz. 1K RPM is about 125 Hz so you are well out of the range of spec performance.
Frequency range 50-60Hz
This is the general shape of the measurements you should get as a function of RPM. Note you will measure much more current if you have a SHUNT R/R instead of a SERIES R/R (that is why stators burn in the first place). Since you are measuring the current in a single phase, you will also not be measuring total current. That will also vary depending up whether you have Delta of Wye winding in the stator.
Most GS are Wye (see the manual) and so the RMS current in each leg is 2/3 of the total current (66.7%). So what ever RPM amperage you measure on a leg multiply that by 3/2 to get total current. If it is not balanced it is more complicated and yours is busted anyway so I won't bother trying to figure that out.
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