So I have a 1978 R100s. The generator light stays on. I do have a volt meter but when I rev the bike the needle on it does wobble about quite a lot so its difficult to get an accurate reading. Should I expect to see 14 volts when the bike is rev'd?
Thanks, Daniel.
Generator light always on - help please
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Re: Generator light always on - help please
Yes. What does a voltmeter read across the battery terminals? Should be well north of 13.8v at 3 to 4000 RPM. Could be you have a diode board problem, a rotor problem, or a voltage regulator problem. There are tests to isolate the issue. Motorrad Elektrik has a troubleshooting book...Snowbum has info on his site. I'm sure the electric gurus will be along shortly!
Kurt
Kurt
Re: Generator light always on - help please
Start by checking the obvious.
Check your battery terminals, then remove the front cover and have a look for burnt wires or broken diode board mounts, etc.
If the charging light is ON, whether it's running or not, the rotor and brushes are most likely not the problem.
That leaves the regulator, the diode board and the stator.
The stators very rarely fail.
You can temporarily by-pass the regulator by unplugging it and jumping the blue and black wires together.
If it charges with these two wires bridged, the regulator is faulty.
The easiest fail-proof regulator test is to substitute it with a known good one.
The diode board has to be removed to be tested.
Before removing it, confirm with a test light that the top half is grounded and the bottom half has power.
After it's removed, do a visual inspection inside and out for melted diodes or other obvious failings.
Then, with a ohmmeter, check that all the diodes only flow current in one direction.
Educated guess: diode board faulty. or wiring, or stator, or regulator, or bad connection, or broken wire,
Check your battery terminals, then remove the front cover and have a look for burnt wires or broken diode board mounts, etc.
If the charging light is ON, whether it's running or not, the rotor and brushes are most likely not the problem.
That leaves the regulator, the diode board and the stator.
The stators very rarely fail.
You can temporarily by-pass the regulator by unplugging it and jumping the blue and black wires together.
If it charges with these two wires bridged, the regulator is faulty.
The easiest fail-proof regulator test is to substitute it with a known good one.
The diode board has to be removed to be tested.
Before removing it, confirm with a test light that the top half is grounded and the bottom half has power.
After it's removed, do a visual inspection inside and out for melted diodes or other obvious failings.
Then, with a ohmmeter, check that all the diodes only flow current in one direction.
Educated guess: diode board faulty. or wiring, or stator, or regulator, or bad connection, or broken wire,
Mechanic from Hell
"I remember every raging second of it...
My bike was on fire, the road was on fire, and I was on fire.
It was the best ride ever!"
"I remember every raging second of it...
My bike was on fire, the road was on fire, and I was on fire.
It was the best ride ever!"
Re: Generator light always on - help please
Don't forget to remove the neg from the battery first.
viewtopic.php?f=1&t=1629&hilit=GEN+light
Cheers, Steve
Victoria, S.E.Oz.
1982 R100RSR100RS supergallery. https://boxerboy81.smugmug.com/R100RS
2006 K1200R.
1994 R1100GS.
Victoria, S.E.Oz.
1982 R100RSR100RS supergallery. https://boxerboy81.smugmug.com/R100RS
2006 K1200R.
1994 R1100GS.
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Re: Generator light always on - help please
Thank you for the relies, I will check and come back.
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Re: Generator light always on - help please
Agreedgspd wrote: ↑Sun Oct 23, 2022 7:37 pm Start by checking the obvious.
Check your battery terminals, then remove the front cover and have a look for burnt wires or broken diode board mounts, etc.
If the charging light is ON, whether it's running or not, the rotor and brushes are most likely not the problem.
That leaves the regulator, the diode board and the stator.
The stators very rarely fail.
You can temporarily by-pass the regulator by unplugging it and jumping the blue and black wires together.
If it charges with these two wires bridged, the regulator is faulty.
The easiest fail-proof regulator test is to substitute it with a known good one.
The diode board has to be removed to be tested.
Before removing it, confirm with a test light that the top half is grounded and the bottom half has power.
After it's removed, do a visual inspection inside and out for melted diodes or other obvious failings.
Then, with a ohmmeter, check that all the diodes only flow current in one direction.
Educated guess: diode board faulty. or wiring, or stator, or regulator, or bad connection, or broken wire,
There is a detailed article on testing BMW (Bosch) diode boards here...
https://robfrankham.com/diode-board-test
Rob
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Re: Generator light always on - help please
Yes, I have fixed it thanks to all the help from here.
I tried jumping the wires to the voltage regulator first but that didn't help, then I thought I would take the diode board off to test as stated in the link here and I found a wire not connected. Hooked that up and happy days it works.
Thanks you so much for the help there is great knowledge here.
I tried jumping the wires to the voltage regulator first but that didn't help, then I thought I would take the diode board off to test as stated in the link here and I found a wire not connected. Hooked that up and happy days it works.
Thanks you so much for the help there is great knowledge here.
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- Posts: 1214
- Joined: Thu Aug 26, 2010 2:11 pm
- Location: Scotland UK, 20 miles from civilisation up a dead end road!
- Contact:
Re: Generator light always on - help please
Thanks for the update.
Rob
Rob