Mark Olson <[email protected]d> wrote:
ideas but if you find anything interesting about your SV650S stator
failure (even if only mildly) by all means please report back.
With the new stator installed the SV seems to charge quite well,
13.7 volts on a LiFePO4 battery 3 days after a 30 mile ride.
My attempt to isolate the short in the old stator succeeded after
a fashion. Gently sawing through the common point of the wye winding
left one phase connected to the core, the other two still connected
to each other but not to the core.
Unwinding the shorted turns from the output end with a test light
hooked up got me all the way back to the center of the wye. About
five turns out there was a blackened spot on the green plastic over
the core. A test probe revealed bare metal amid the charring.
The mechanical integrity of the windings was impressive. Attempts to
pry the splice free of the varnish, rather than cut it, were totally
futile. It seems quite implausible that vibration played any role in
the failure. The wires simply can't move. There may have been an air
bubble at the point of failure, allowing a track to form, but the low
voltage makes that hard to understand. Most insulating enamel will
hold off a couple hundred volts (if it's undamaged). Probably the
enamel got scratched and there was a flaw in the green plastic over
the core. Any air gap must have been extremely small, less than a
few thousandths of an inch, to permit a track to form.
The plastic sleeving over the output wires was brittle and cracked
during disassembly. It had nothing to do with the failure, but did
suggest age has taken a toll on the materials of construction.
Around a year ago I notied a fast blink on the turn signals when the
revs went over about 7k. It only happened on vigorous engine braking
toward the end of my exercise ride route. I checked the voltage with
a simple LED bargraph voltmeter and saw no anomaly when the flasher
was hyperventilating, but I couldn't reproduce the effect in the shop
when a good voltmeter was handy. I chalked it up to an old flasher.
Perhaps it was the stator putting hash on the harness.
For a while I harbored notions of trying to rewind the core as a spare.
Seeing how well it was made and how hard it was to take apart that seems unrealistic. I'll save it as a relic and curiosity, and devoutly hope I
never have a reason to attempt a rewind.
Thanks for reading,
bob prohaska
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