The less dramatic version of that is use a thermal camera to check for poor connections or shorts inside the frame. Not that many people have access to a thermal camera. If there is a broken wire, this probably won't give you any idea.
It looked to be but it wouldn't hurt to undo the connection to check.
This thing needs about 1/4 - 1/3 throttle and then it starts first kick. I've had it around the lawn and a few test runs up the street. Tried to upload the vid but it's too large.
It looked to be but it wouldn't hurt to undo the connection to check.
This thing needs about 1/4 - 1/3 throttle and then it starts first kick. I've had it around the lawn and a few test runs up the street. Tried to upload the vid but it's too large.
OP had a toggle switch in the neg line before it went to ground at a sketchy engine connection. Replaced that with a fresh line and only got 6.0v while the Squeeze was pretty much revving the shyte out of it.
After lunch, a doob and some home made hard cider I'll be in a mind to find the "ac generator" plug and start by checking for continuity there. Being retired is hard to take.....
OP had a toggle switch in the neg line before it went to ground at a sketchy engine connection. Replaced that with a fresh line and only got 6.0v while the Squeeze was pretty much revving the shyte out of it.
After lunch, a doob and some home made hard cider I'll be in a mind to find the "ac generator" plug and start by checking for continuity there. Being retired is hard to take.....
OP had a toggle switch in the neg line before it went to ground at a sketchy engine connection. Replaced that with a fresh line and only got 6.0v while the Squeeze was pretty much revving the shyte out of it.
After lunch, a doob and some home made hard cider I'll be in a mind to find the "ac generator" plug and start by checking for continuity there. Being retired is hard to take.....
1) Test your battery first.
Using a voltmeter, check voltage. Below 4.25 and the battery is bad and should be replaced, fully charged reads ~6.3v, 20% charge is ~6v. If it's >4.25v and >6.25v, charge the battery. L
You can also test the specific gravity of the acid, it should read between 1.22-1.28 on a good battery. If there is >.05 difference between cells, the battery is bad, if the diff is less, charge the battery..
On these old bikes I usually get rid of the selenium rectifier by replacing with a MOSFET 12v regulator from a dirtbike. If you want 12v electrics, just changing the rectifier, battery and bulbs to 12v types.
OP had a toggle switch in the neg line before it went to ground at a sketchy engine connection. Replaced that with a fresh line and only got 6.0v while the Squeeze was pretty much revving the shyte out of it.
After lunch, a doob and some home made hard cider I'll be in a mind to find the "ac generator" plug and start by checking for continuity there. Being retired is hard to take.....
There's a clue in that... I'm guessing there is something draining power when the bike is off. You can pickup a new complete harness off EBAY for about $30. I usually go that route as 50 years is a long time to expect trouble free bike wiring.
The manual made it look like in order to acess the connection I needed to remove the rear engine side cover. Have to pull the muffler to get it off. Rather than separate the muffler and header I just pulled the foot peg/kick stand assembly AND surprise surprise the connection was NOT accessible from behind the side cover.
However this procedure did show why I had such bad exhaust leaks. No exhaust gaskets!! Who are these people and where are their parents!
First check the stator for continuity, I'm assuming its 3-phase ?
If the battery is good and the stator is good that only leaves the regulator and rectifier. If you're still getting low voltage when running its the regulator, if you're getting AC its the rectifier.
The only other thing it might be is a demagnetized rotor, but the likelihood of that is pretty slim.
The charging systems weren't great to begin with, don't expect miracles.
Managed to get to the AC generator lead and had continuity on all three coils. On to the next step. My bike shows a selenium rectifer (is the regulator built in?)
Is a check of the BOLD text done at the battery terminals with the multimeter set first for DC and AC? If I got 6V when checking in DC mode do I need to check for AC? (hoping not as I have the bike apart now)
Interestling I found this in the assortment of bits that came with this bike. I suspect I'm following in someone's foot steps. @Mad Mike is the MOSFET regulator of which you speak? It has "6V" in red marker on one side. If so any idea on how to determine which leads go where?
where you show "connecting ground" I have a green wire with and open side eye - that makes sense
where you show "connect the battery" I have another green wire - that seems wrong
where you show "signal winding" I have a red - I would think that's the battery?
where you show "lighting winding" I have yellow
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