TomC
Okay there is no kick start only electric and it has to have greater than 11V to be able to get it started. I have the ignitio ndirect wired via a relay from the battery. All lights are in working order. I put the key on and turn the headlights on high and check voltage = 11.5V Yes the battery is grounded to the frame and the postive goes to the starter solenoid where I tapped off for my direct wire. There is a 30 amp fuse here that I believe is the main fuse for the bike. The R/R plugs in here with four wires. With the bike off
Batt '-' 0V Batt '+' 13.39V Starter solenoid 13.39V
With the bike idle at 2K
Batt '-' 0V - >20V
Batt '+' 0V - >20V
Starter 13V - >20V
I think this means the regulator is bad. I am going to check the resistance across the rotor and check the yellow wires coming from the alternator. Anything else to check?
Where are you placing the probes for these tests?
The meter should be on the DC setting. It reads voltage potential across the probe tips. The battery cannot actually have zero volts across the terminals unless it is stone cold dead. If it is not dead, then your meter or test technique is faulty.
Because of the variation in the way digital meters are implemented. I suppose it is possible that shorted diodes in the rectifier may be placing AC voltage on the battery terminals, an these voltage spikes are sending your DC reading off scale.
If you have faith in your meter, then change the scale to an AC range, and note the reading. There should not be much of a reading. If you see 30-60 volt peaks, then the rectifier is suspect.
I don't know if you have a combined regulator/rectifier, or separate units lie the SOHC4's had when stock. An AC voltage read with a DC scale would read 0V. Feeding AC voltage to a battery will kill it eventually.
I was reluctant to respond to this post, simply because it is forum abuse. It belongs in other bikes. I will report this to the mods.