- Sun Oct 13, 2013 1:26 pm
#29414
Hi Norm... I have decided to do the full dc conversion. As you stated in another post, there is no reason for having two different systems complicating things unnecessarily. I also read the Pete Snidal manual on the subject, and he mentions to be aware of joining the wires correct to keep it in phase (se below):
• Connect the four output wires into a 2-wire AC output to feed the rectifier, thus retaining your all-DC system. This is a relatively straightforward operation, with the following caveat: the 2-coil pair must be connected to the 4-coil pair such that the two pairs deliver their AC in phase with one another.
Use shrink tubing and solder for all connections. Without delving into the AC theory of this operation, it is sufficient to say that there are two ways to connect the wires, one correct, and one wrong. The steps are simple.
• 1. The Amber (orange) output line may be grounded to the stator frame. Check for grounding with a circuit tester. If continuity is detected, find the point at which the amber wire is grounded and unground it.
• 2. Strip the wires, and connect the two Rectifier lines (both purple - or black and red) to the rectifier inputs. Strip the other two "AC Headlight" lines (usually orange and red) - extending them to reach to the rectifier - and have them ready to connect in parallel to the first pair. Although these will be connected in parallel to the rectifier input, their polarity (actually phasing) is important. The trick will be to find out which way.
• 3. Start the machine and warm it to where it runs reliably. Then, with engine running, conduct tests at about 1500 rpm:
• 4. Confirm that the Yellow output line does not spark when flashed to the chassis. If it does, repeat step 1) above. Then connect it to either one of the rectifier lines.
• 5. Intermittently strike the other AC light line (Orange) to the other rectifier line, looking for a spark as you do so. Then reverse the first connection, and try the second again. The fattest spark was the sign that the connections were out of phase. Actually, in most cases, there will be a spark both ways, but the way that showed the smallest spark is the correct one.
• 6. Your multimeter, set to ACV, may be used in place of the "spark" method above. The lowest ACV reading should indicate the proper connection.
I will use the multimeter for this operation. My question is, will the reg/rec stand the out-of-phase current going in the two yellow wires on it? By the way I will use a 200W reg/rec only unit; not the Powerbox... all the best Jacob