
Originally Posted by
ps2fixer
That post seems to lack a lot of details, like what a good ohm reading should be so you know what range it should be set in. A low resistance or inf seems like a wide range lol. Meters also have a "diode" test option, typically with the beep setting and it puts out actual voltage to get past a diode (0.7v drop typically). I know you can test diodes fairly easily, but with it being a bit of a black box, I can't really say for sure how to test it. The regulator technically is 4 wire/contacts, 2 ac, 2 dc, just like a Honda regulator/rectifier like off of an ATC200ES. I haven't had any luck with the Chinese ones so I've stuck with OEM or new with real specs provided. The rectifier section is almost always fullwave, it boils down to 4 diodes, very very simple circuit and extremely cheap. It's the voltage regulator that is the more complicated part.
Besides the 4 wire style regulator/rectifier, there's a 5-6 wire version too, the primary thing to focus on is the number of input pins though, generally yellow wires. 2 = single phase (same as your machine) and 3 = 3 phase which is like an ATC250ES. 3 phase should work, but you need 3x the spec because all of your power is only using one phase of the regulator rectifier. It's a 6 diode bridge rectifier instead of 4 and again a voltage regulator circuit afterwards.
The voltage regulation on these machines are generally load based, or in other words, short the excess power to ground and generate heat as a byproduct, so specs are pretty important since no load on the system is maxing out the regulator/rectifier since it's sinking the full load to try to stay in the 13.5-14.5v target range.
Some day I need to dive back into the regulators and try to find a quality source with a good water proof connector and such, maybe from a modern quad that's 3 phase and wire it up for these older machines. The components to build a regulator/rectifier isn't really all that much, the hardest part is sourcing a connector and a suitable housing to sink the heat to (needs to be metal).