The rectifier is a new unit from Oregon Motorcycle Parts. Before my last ride i checked all diodes for infinite resistance one direction and continuity in the other and it checked out. I can take actual resistance measurements if it would be helpful.
While it is probably good, it would be nice to have a verification. Good parts can be made bad, and it is really only brand new until it has had power applied to it. Then it is a used part.
I will check resistance in the yellow stator wires this evening. This is done by measuring resistance from where the yellow wires connect to the stator to where the yellow wires end at the rectifier plug....correct?
That checks the interconnect wires. Nice to have that unknown moved into the Known good column.
The bike is really really clean. I see no evidence that it has ever been dropped.
OK. I'm mainly interested in the stator cover. Look for impact marks or unexplained scratches all over it, side and bottom.
I can measure AC voltage to the rectifier. I do this by connecting positive meter lead to ?? wire on rectifier plug (rectifier disconnected?) and grounding the black meter lead? Do we want voltage readings at a range of engine RPM's here?
You will use the AC volts setting on your meter. I don't know which ranges you have available on your meter. But, you should expect up to 70V maybe 80V (depends on system load), so select a range that won't overload the meter input.
You will place one probe on the Green rectifier connection and probe each of the Yellow wires at the rectifier in turn. The frequency will change with RPM. Most cheap meters are calibrated for 60 Hz in the US. So, while it may not be totally accurate, it should give us an idea that all phases of the Alternator output are giving us the required power. Just a heads up, we are never going to want to see less than 30VRMS at each phase output of the stator.
It may seem like a lot to ask. But, just like taking measurements of the DC at multiple RPMs and system loads, I'd like three AC values under the same conditions; RPM and headlight on or off.
Testing usually involves gathering enough data until the data itself points to the problem area. Sometimes you can stop gathering data when a smoking gun is found. But, unless you know what you are looking for, the smoking gun may not look like one to the uninitiated.
I've been away, so forgive a possible repeat question. Have you already measured the stator resistance and checked each of the stator wires for continuity to the engine case?
Cheers,