With the stator disconnected and the bike running at 5K rpm, my stator AC output is 80+ volts on each of the 3 legs. Stator output is wired directly to the R/R. The R/R DC+ and - are connected directly to battery terminals.
The main battery ground wire to the engine is new. The fuse box is new as is the main power supply wire to it. The battery terminals are clean and the battery holds 13+ volts. There is no electrical leak/seepage on the battery when the bike is shut down.
If I start the bike and rev it to 5k rpm with the only power draw being the ignition (headlight and tail light off) the charge voltage to the battery is 13.2 volts. If I turn the headlight on low beam (55 watt), the charge rate increases to 13.9 volts. If I switch the headlight to high beam (60 watts), the charge rate increases to 14.77 volts. All charge rates are at 5k rpm. The charge rate increases by .9 volts with only a 5 watt increase in power consumption.
The stator is supplying the same AC voltage at all of the different DC charge rates. My question is: does anyone know if the R/R is multiple gated on the DC output? Until now, I did not believe it was as none of my other bikes have shown these charging characteristics. I was under the impression that the R/R output was linear to AC input and acceptance rate to the battery was controlled by electrical pressure after load was deducted from the total. Any remainder then would be absorbed as heat.
The charging system is working (apparently fine), but the thing that bothers me the most is if the headlight were to burn out, load would be lost and the system would not charge.
A solution could be as simple as installing a couple of 5 watt running lights to keep the power consumption above the gate value when the headlight is on low beam.
I've made and installed a new wiring harness. Apparently, the lowered resistance has resulted in not consuming enough power? :-)
Maybe I just have a half burned out R/R? :-)
????????????????
Earl
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