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The newer Electro Sport stator for comparison... I soldered and heat shrunk the spade connectors so they plug right into the regulator/rectifier...My Motorcycles:
22 Kawasaki Z900 RS (Candy Tone Blue)
22 BMW K1600GT (Probably been to a town near you)
82 1100e Drag Bike (needs race engine)
81 1100e Street Bike (with race engine)
79 1000e (all original)
82 850g (all original)
80 KZ 650F (needs restored)
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Originally posted by Nessism View PostI don't think a thick external coating is a direct measure of quality. Where I work we assemble motors for a few (aerospace) products and none of the stators have that killer thick coating. These motors spin at 25,000 rpm's too and they are decently sized (not tiny).
I think the OEM stators are made by ND aren't they? Not exactly a shady operation.
It unfortunate that Shunt R/R's have caused such a high attrition rate on stator that,( and not only for the obvious reasons) any stator design weaknesses are quickly associated with the shunt R/R rather than a poor (albeit adequate) stator design.
As per the discussion and contrary to your thinking, the winding need to be immobilized and as opposed to simply being coated. So when you look at your particular stator, do you feel that the winding can be subjected to EMF forces and not flex? We are not talking about a high speed motor but rather that the simple electro-mechanical device we call a stator.
When I look at the way that the windings are joined with unsupported wires bridging between poles, I would really like to see something to help support them and the epoxy is comforting. If you consider the vibration that the engine has and where this stator lives, it is a whole different more hostile environment than a motor spinning at 25K RPM. You need to evaluate the principal factors involved v.s. making an apples to oranges comparison and drawing your conclusions from that.
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I deliberately avoid the stators new or used that have been gooped - I like to see the winding job. A decent insulating varnish should hold the windings in place from the tugging/ reaction of the spinning magnets. A poor winding job can look great covered, but unless you drop it on floor, the goop is overkill. I remember reading about some guy with a CX-500 that battled the gooped ES stators twenty years ago- the goop covered a very careless winding technique1981 gs650L
"We are all born ignorant, but you have to work hard to stay stupid" Ben Franklin
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Originally posted by tom203 View PostI deliberately avoid the stators new or used that have been gooped - I like to see the winding job. A decent insulating varnish should hold the windings in place from the tugging/ reaction of the spinning magnets. A poor winding job can look great covered, but unless you drop it on floor, the goop is overkill. I remember reading about some guy with a CX-500 that battled the gooped ES stators twenty years ago- the goop covered a very careless winding technique
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