Posted by Owen Aaland on June 01, 2011 at 08:24:30 from (216.47.32.42):
In Reply to: H electrical posted by BUCK CLAYTON on May 31, 2011 at 17:21:27:
Quoting Removed, click Modern View to see
???? You said it had a 12 volt battery. A 12 volt battery can have any where from 12.6 volts fully charged down to nothing if it is completely flat. You posted that the generator voltage was 7.25. What was the reading on the battery side of the regulator? It is possible that the voltage reading you got was all the generator was capable of at the RPM it was running. If the voltage at the generator and the battery are not close the cut out in the regulator is not closed and you are not charging the battery.
What is the battery voltage when you when measuring the voltage at the coil? If it still has the original coil it will need a resistor to operate properly with a 12 volt battery. If the battery voltage and the coil voltage were about the same you do not have a resistor in the system. If the coil voltage is about half of the battery voltage then most likely you do have a resistor in the system. (A bad connection or wire can show the same results as a resistor but is unlikely to maintain an even resistance over any length of time.)
Adding an ignition resistor inside the light switch box is not the normal location you see it installed but it can work the same where ever it is located.
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