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MickYork wrote:Copied from MB site:
This stator can also be used as an AC stator by using one of the 2 Yellow wires as earth. If it doesn't work swap one of the Yellow wires around
TS1-200 wrote:OK to recap, one of the yellow wires, goes straight to an earthing point, not to the regulator, and the white, red, green, go to the CD1, so what wire goes to the regulator, the other yellow ? how can you tell which yellow goes where
Nelly wrote:Here's 2 pics from a tutorial on how to convert a standard stator to DC.
See how they de-solder the end of the coils from the earthed point on the stator plate and attach a new yellow wire to it? This is basically how your stator plate is wired, like the modified one.
All you are doing to return it to the original configuration is to earth one end of the coils again.
As you can see in the pic, it won't matter which one goes down to earth, it's just a big loop of wire going round the coils.
I could go into detail and explain exactly how it works when running, but that would just bore the crap out of you............
Nelly wrote:The lighting coils are a very low resistance, hardly even registering a resistance on the multimeter, due to the wire used in the lighting coils being heavier gauge than that used in the low tension coil and pickup coil.
To test you have continuity set the meter to the lowest ohms scale and test across all the coils.
I'll double check in the Vespa Haynes manual if there was a benchmark resistance to look for across the lighting coils, I really can't remember. It would be very low resistance though.
Hope this helps.
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