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Mike_eash

Is my stater bad 10hp kohler?

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Mike_eash

I have a charger 10 that I am restoring my first full restoration

However my battery is not charging 

I tested ac volts from stater was around 25.3 volts

However battery is only charging at around 12

Is this a stater problem or a regulater problem i read somewhere if stator is not putting out between 50 and 60 its likely bad

Can someone give some insight I'm a newbie

Thanks

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ebinmaine

:text-welcomewave:

 

 

Most Kohler single cylinder stators should put out around 35 Volts AC, give or take. 

This has to be tested above half throttle. Preferably full throttle. 3600 RPM. 

 

One of the most important things to remember is that these are DC systems. 

Direct Current. 

No ground equals no circuit. 

Bad ground equals bad readings. 

 

Be sure the engine is well grounded and connected to the battery ground. 

Be sure the Voltage Regulator is well grounded.  

 

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gwest_ca

Measure voltage across battery posts.

Turn key to RUN position with the engine not running

Measure voltage at the DC+ regulator terminal.

Should be the same voltage.

If it is not the same the charge current has no good path back to the battery.

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rmaynard

:WRS:

Rarely does a stator go bad, but if you look in the Kohler manual, there are other stator tests that can be done. The Kohler manual can be downloaded from our manuals section of the forum. 

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Ed Kennell
3 hours ago, ebinmaine said:

Be sure the Voltage Regulator is well grounded. 

 

                                 :text-yeahthat:   Remove the reg. and clean the back and the mounting surface to bare metal.    

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rmaynard

Just a thought before we get too far, is this a 1969 or 1972 Charger 10? If it's a 1969 we are dealing with a Tecumseh HH100 engine vs. a Kohler K-241 on a 1972. The basic operation is the same, but details about testing the stator may differ. :eusa-think:

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Ed Kennell
6 minutes ago, rmaynard said:

If it's a 1969 we are dealing with a Tecumseh HH100 engine

In his title Bob.    It's a 10 HP Kohler.

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Gasaholic
9 hours ago, Mike_eash said:

I have a charger 10 that I am restoring my first full restoration

However my battery is not charging 

I tested ac volts from stater was around 25.3 volts

How exactly was it tested? Was this test done with meter on AC volts and both probes connected to either wire from the stator? at 3600 RPM? If yes, then likely bad stator. If not, then test was done wrong. (Testing a wire from stator to ground, using AC volts, you're only getting half the AC wave, thus half the stator output - which is why you must test across the 2 wires to get a full AC wave reading.) 

9 hours ago, Mike_eash said:

However battery is only charging at around 12

Is this a stater problem or a regulater problem i read somewhere if stator is not putting out between 50 and 60 its likely bad

Can someone give some insight I'm a newbie

Thanks

Remember you are converting AC volts to DC volts through the regulator, and this usually means the regulator (a more advanced rectifier) is going to be taking only one half of the AC sine wave (at it's simplest, typically the + side) and thus it is going to output half of the AC volts as DC volts.  So, if you are truly getting 25V A.C. then it would stand to reason you're only seeing 12V DC   Typically at full blast (on a low battery charge) the rectifier is going to regulate output to 14.8V so you want to see a bare minimum 28V AC volts @ 3600 RPM , more typically you'd see 35-42 volts AC 

(Note this is off the seat of my pants figures, my memory is not as good as it used to be, but I am very sure the minimum output from a good stator must be 28V AC volts at full throttle) 

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Mike_eash

Thanks for the input guys!

To your point gasaholic the way I tested my stator was at full throttle using my battery - terminal as my ground point. I did have my meter turned to ac current

I assume I tested it wrong since I used my battery as a ground point if I am understanding correctly. I will test again across both wires. 

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Mike_eash

Hey gasaholic I tested my stator again across both wires it fluctuates between 29 and 30.

Hey side note

Could a bad battery cause a bad charge reading?

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gwest_ca
3 hours ago, Mike_eash said:

 

Could a bad battery cause a bad charge reading?

Sure can. One can not accurately diagnose a charging system with a defective battery.

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ebinmaine
10 hours ago, Mike_eash said:

Could a bad battery cause a bad charge reading?

 

7 hours ago, gwest_ca said:

Sure can. One can not accurately diagnose a charging system with a defective battery.

 

Yepp. 

Mike, that's why it's important to separate the circuits for testing. 

Isolate the issues from one another.  

Unplugging the engine from the harness keeps the meter reading specific to the engine output. 

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rmaynard
21 hours ago, Ed Kennell said:

In his title Bob.    It's a 10 HP Kohler.

I'm going to have to stop responding at 3 in the morning :sleeping-sleep:

  • Haha 3

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