I thought regulator switched power to the field coils to maintain voltage on these bikes? ('monitors' battery voltage and opens and closes contactors)
Mechanical regulators can only switch at around 60 cycles per second (or thereabouts) the constant voltage spikes are generally not good for battery.
Electronic regulators 'switch' around 200 cycles per second.
With centre tap alternators (Yamaha, Suzuki, BMW) they 'switch at 600+cycles per second,
May not be a bad idea to check contacts and settings
There is only so much you can get out of the generator no matter how fast you spin it. really you need to work out the total amp draw and make sure your not exceeding it. (Ahh, remember Lucas?
)
If you have a 55/60 headlight bulb (around 5amps@12volt main beam), plus coil draw, (about another 5 amps total) plus tail light, idiot lights and voltage drops through old connectors you probably get very close to or exceed the max capabilities of system
At only 1000 miles a year it should be left on a trickle charger most of the time in my opinion, the hamsters probably starved to death
On batteries, I had to replace a 3 yr old battery on Mazda B2300 pickup, battery design has improved to the point where it can fail withing a few months of acceptable design life. For years automotive trade has relied on built in obsolescence to stay alive.
Thread hijack,
There was a documentary about John Deere tractors, they almost went bankrupt because they were lasting too long, average design life was 22 yrs, cut it to 10 and people were OK with buying a new tractor, repair parts available but repairing old wasn't as efficient as buying new for major items.
Orwell was probably about 50 yrs off, but the corporations are going to run everything eventually (we already have cameras in public places for our safety, business probably running governments, protecting overseas investments, etc)
PJ