I don't have stator problems and I know people do have
problems with the Stators on some bikes but I didn't
know Suzuki "To save expense in the regulation circuits
Suzuki decided not to regulate all three phase inputs (all
three wires coming from the stator), but only ONE"
Is this true?
I found the info below for the 1982 Katana but it list this
problems for most early 1980's suzuki Motorcycles on this
website:
BRAND: SUZUKI
MODEL: GS1100S Katana (GSX1100 Katana) GS1000S GS750S
YEARS: 1982
CATEGORY: MOTORCYCLE
TECHNICAL ISSUE DETAILS
Suzuki's GS models all use a permanent magnet alternator
system for charging the battery. This system consists of
a stator with three output leads and a regulator/rectifier
which rectifies the stator AC output to DC and regulates
it to 14.4Vdc to charge the battery. Problem however is
that the way Suzuki handled the regulation on these bikes
is not very good. To save expense in the regulation circuits
Suzuki decided not to regulate all three phase inputs (all
three wires coming from the stator), but only ONE. One of
the three wires from the stator (YELLOW) feeds directly into
the rectifier circuit without ANY regulation. One of the
three stator wires (WHITE/BLUE) feeds into the rectifier
AND has a regulation circuit attached to it. The third
stator wire (WHITE/GREEN) feeds into into the bike wiring
harness, connects inside the headlight to the handlebar
switch and comes back from the handlebar switch as a
WHITE/RED wire which connects directly into the rectifier
bridge without ANY regulation. Inside the handlebar switch
the connection between WHITE/GREEN and WHITE/RED is made
when the lights are turned on (which is not an option on
US models, so the connection between these wires is continuous).
NOTE: the stator output is identical on all three wires. The
three different colors are not needed, it does not matter how
you hook up the stator wires as long as you hook them all up.
The result of this cost cutting is an unbalanced load on the
stator (the stator wants to see an equal load on all three phase
outputs) which causes premature stator failure. Our replacement
regulator/rectifier regulates on ALL THREE PHASE INPUTS. This
means that the load on the three phase outputs of the stator is
equal, greatly improving the system and its reliability. Our
ESR models for these Suzukis therefore have THREE YELLOW INPUTS.
And it does not matter which YELLOW wire connects to which stator
output wire. We recommend removing the loop through the wiring
harness and connect the WHITE/GREEN stator wire directly into
the regulator/rectifier. If you replace the OEM stator with
one of our ESG stators you will notice also that the output
leads of this new stator are all YELLOW. We also recommend
checking all electrical connections in these bikes. The
connectors are not that great, and the bikes are fairly old
by now. Clean the connectors one by one with some contact
cleaner and make sure the bullet style connectors are tight.
Our faultfinding chart: Fault Finding Guide will be a great
help in diagnosing when you have a charging problem on these
Suzukis.
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