Introduction & Alternator Question
Posted: Sat Oct 17, 2009 8:42 pm
Learned Friends,
I'm new to this forum, and I'd like to introduce myself. It may be that this post should be split up or moved to the tech section; my apologies if I'm not doing it right. Please let me know.
I am very happy to have found this forum. I'm old enough to remember life before the internet, but I have no idea how we managed. I don't think I'd have bought my Spree without the knowledge that lots of information -- and helpful people -- were available on the net. Thanks a bunch to those who put all the technical information out.
I'd been toying with the idea of getting a moped for quite a while ... not so much for transportation but for cheap fun and to do the "shuttle" when going canoeing. So when I saw an ad for a 1986 Spree in "great condition" on Craigslist, and google told me it was 3 blocks north of my house, of course I went for a look-see.
Well, the "great condition" Spree didn't actually, you know, "run," and the seller wasn't too sure he wanted to, you know, "sell" --- but in the end, we made a deal whereby I fixed his '86 Spree by cleaning the carb and unsticking the float; and once it ran OK, he sold me the '85 he had in the corner of the garage for $150. Deal!
That red beauty came with 2,100 miles on the clock, two flat tires, a dead battery, somewhat banged-up body parts, and of course it didn't run either... but the engine was free, and once i pumped the tires up with my bicycle pump, I could push the silly thing home. I emptied the float bowl, cleaned the plug, measured compression while I was at it -- 155 lbs -- and had it running in a good half hour. Next, I unstuck the throttle cable and bought a new battery, and I thought I had it made. I rode it around for a few miles -- ye olde Italian tuneup -- and now fires up in 2 seconds from dead cold. Yay. Except...
I still have a couple electrical issues: Neither the headlight nor the charging circuit work.
What's puzzling is this: On the first ride, right when I got her running and I was still on the old battery, I did have high and low beam. Except the light would sometimes go off completely when I switched between the two, so I figured the dimmer switch was flaky. I don't know for sure about the charging circuit, but it must have worked, since I had working turn signals once I was up to speed, even with the bad battery. Nothing, of course, with the charger off.
As soon as I installed the new battery, no more headlight.
And no charging either: battery is 12.8 V without load; 12.3 V with the brake light / tail light on, and 11.95 Volt when running ... it looks to me that the charging circuit does not work.
I did the required tests per the manual; pp. 14-6 and 14-7:
4P Connector; yellow to engine ground is 0.8 Ohm -- Spec. is 0.3 to 2.0 Ohm.
White to engine ground is 1.3 Ohm -- Spec is 0.5 to 3.0 Ohm.
When measured from the yellow and white wire connectors coming from the alternator, the numbers are the same. Here's a picture of that wiring; I dunno if it's all stock. A previous owner may have done some futzing with the electrics, I don't know.
https://www.msu.edu/~steine13/toeff01.jpg
For reference, I measured ground to ground to see what "0" would come out to, and got numbers from 0.1 Ohm to 0.6 Ohm, depending on where I put the test points and how hard I pushed. From those measurements, I'd say regulator/rectifier and charging/lamp coil check out. But that doesn't change the fact it doesn't work...
I also looked for loose wires, but the only thing I could find that was wrong was the 7A fuse that should be on the red wire coming from the battery was missing and the wires were twisted together and taped. I used a clip lead to bridge that.
https://www.msu.edu/~steine13/toeff03.jpg
I don't see how that could be the issue.
Finally, I don't understand the sealed-beam headlight. If it's really sealed beam, shouldn't there be a plug on the back? That doesn't look like a plug to me; it's a solid connection:
https://www.msu.edu/~steine13/toeff02.jpg
https://www.msu.edu/~steine13/toeff02b.jpg
The reason I care about *that* is that i'm thinking I could easily run the headlight off 12 V DC, same as the taillight, but then I'd have to be sure that I'm not tying the stator AC circuit to 12 V; I believe that danger has been pointed out elsewhere. If I could remove the bulb from the circuit, I could make sure that that doesn't happen.
I took off the dimmer switch and measured the AC voltage coming into it (yellow wire) with the engine running.. yes, there is AC, but only ~ 1.2 V. not the 13-15 V it should be.
Does anybody have an idea what that might mean?
This post got a little longer than I intended. Any help, suggestions, further measurements I could do.... would be appreciated. Thanks in advance!
Cheers,
-Mathias
Mathias Steiner
East Lansing, MI
steine13@msu.edu
I'm new to this forum, and I'd like to introduce myself. It may be that this post should be split up or moved to the tech section; my apologies if I'm not doing it right. Please let me know.
I am very happy to have found this forum. I'm old enough to remember life before the internet, but I have no idea how we managed. I don't think I'd have bought my Spree without the knowledge that lots of information -- and helpful people -- were available on the net. Thanks a bunch to those who put all the technical information out.
I'd been toying with the idea of getting a moped for quite a while ... not so much for transportation but for cheap fun and to do the "shuttle" when going canoeing. So when I saw an ad for a 1986 Spree in "great condition" on Craigslist, and google told me it was 3 blocks north of my house, of course I went for a look-see.
Well, the "great condition" Spree didn't actually, you know, "run," and the seller wasn't too sure he wanted to, you know, "sell" --- but in the end, we made a deal whereby I fixed his '86 Spree by cleaning the carb and unsticking the float; and once it ran OK, he sold me the '85 he had in the corner of the garage for $150. Deal!
That red beauty came with 2,100 miles on the clock, two flat tires, a dead battery, somewhat banged-up body parts, and of course it didn't run either... but the engine was free, and once i pumped the tires up with my bicycle pump, I could push the silly thing home. I emptied the float bowl, cleaned the plug, measured compression while I was at it -- 155 lbs -- and had it running in a good half hour. Next, I unstuck the throttle cable and bought a new battery, and I thought I had it made. I rode it around for a few miles -- ye olde Italian tuneup -- and now fires up in 2 seconds from dead cold. Yay. Except...
I still have a couple electrical issues: Neither the headlight nor the charging circuit work.
What's puzzling is this: On the first ride, right when I got her running and I was still on the old battery, I did have high and low beam. Except the light would sometimes go off completely when I switched between the two, so I figured the dimmer switch was flaky. I don't know for sure about the charging circuit, but it must have worked, since I had working turn signals once I was up to speed, even with the bad battery. Nothing, of course, with the charger off.
As soon as I installed the new battery, no more headlight.
And no charging either: battery is 12.8 V without load; 12.3 V with the brake light / tail light on, and 11.95 Volt when running ... it looks to me that the charging circuit does not work.
I did the required tests per the manual; pp. 14-6 and 14-7:
4P Connector; yellow to engine ground is 0.8 Ohm -- Spec. is 0.3 to 2.0 Ohm.
White to engine ground is 1.3 Ohm -- Spec is 0.5 to 3.0 Ohm.
When measured from the yellow and white wire connectors coming from the alternator, the numbers are the same. Here's a picture of that wiring; I dunno if it's all stock. A previous owner may have done some futzing with the electrics, I don't know.
https://www.msu.edu/~steine13/toeff01.jpg
For reference, I measured ground to ground to see what "0" would come out to, and got numbers from 0.1 Ohm to 0.6 Ohm, depending on where I put the test points and how hard I pushed. From those measurements, I'd say regulator/rectifier and charging/lamp coil check out. But that doesn't change the fact it doesn't work...
I also looked for loose wires, but the only thing I could find that was wrong was the 7A fuse that should be on the red wire coming from the battery was missing and the wires were twisted together and taped. I used a clip lead to bridge that.
https://www.msu.edu/~steine13/toeff03.jpg
I don't see how that could be the issue.
Finally, I don't understand the sealed-beam headlight. If it's really sealed beam, shouldn't there be a plug on the back? That doesn't look like a plug to me; it's a solid connection:
https://www.msu.edu/~steine13/toeff02.jpg
https://www.msu.edu/~steine13/toeff02b.jpg
The reason I care about *that* is that i'm thinking I could easily run the headlight off 12 V DC, same as the taillight, but then I'd have to be sure that I'm not tying the stator AC circuit to 12 V; I believe that danger has been pointed out elsewhere. If I could remove the bulb from the circuit, I could make sure that that doesn't happen.
I took off the dimmer switch and measured the AC voltage coming into it (yellow wire) with the engine running.. yes, there is AC, but only ~ 1.2 V. not the 13-15 V it should be.
Does anybody have an idea what that might mean?
This post got a little longer than I intended. Any help, suggestions, further measurements I could do.... would be appreciated. Thanks in advance!
Cheers,
-Mathias
Mathias Steiner
East Lansing, MI
steine13@msu.edu