- Sat Jul 28, 2018 12:39 pm
#78208
Well, having checked the battery and found it not charging then checked the alternator and found it to be working there are now only two possabilities. 1) A regulator/rectifier fault. 2) A wiring fault between the alternator and reg/rec or the battery connection.
I'm actually thinking the latter is reasonably likely because a reg/rec fault would NOT affect the lights on an AC/DC bike
So, Aethelrics trick sounds worth a try. Also worth checking the wiring. It could well be very cruddy by now. There will be a series of bullet connectors which connect the alternator to the reg/rec sub-loom. Follow the wires up as they come out of the primary chaincase and you'll come to those. Pull them apart one at a time, give them a good clean and reattach. The ones on my '07 350 were so green and fuzzy I landed up cutting them off and relacing them.
You can test the continuity of any of the wires by setting your meter to measure resistance and applying a probe to either end of the wire. Resistance should read almost zero if the wire is intact. If it reads high (or whatever the meter reading is when the leads aren't touching anything, often a 1), you have an open circuit so there's a chance the wire is broken inside the insulation.
Ok. Now my best guess for your fault: Bad main earth connection. Follow the fat wire from the battery negative, the other end normally attaches to a ring terminal which is connected to the frame by being trapped under the bolt that holds the battery shelf on. Take it off and have a look. It needs bare metal to metal contact with the frame. Rust does not conduct electricity in any meaningful way. Deploy old screwdriver/emery paper etc to make that a good contact then cover it with a smear of dielectric grease/vaseline after reassembling it to prevent it corroding again.