This manual may be of some help to you. It shows testing procedure and specs for most Briggs charging systems. https://www.briggsandstratton.com/c...n_us/Files/FAQs/alternator_specifications.pdf
Which is quite stupid is one sense and lazy in another. All enamel coated wire has resistance, just very, very low resistance but it is still measurable. It is going to be probably under one ohm but I won't know a day or two. Actually I need to find my milli ohm meter. It is packed away in boxes that I never have opened since I move to my current home 6 years ago.To my understanding there are no resistance specs for the stator. Most of the time you are looking for either windings which are shorted or open. This manual has all tests Briggs recommends for troubleshooting their charging systems. https://www.briggsandstratton.com/c...a/en_us/Files/FAQs/alternator_replacement.pdf
Are you measuring the two sides individually to ground? So basically one wire (at connector) to the metal "frame" of the stator.Okay here a rough measurement of the ohm-age.
AC circuit is about 0.4 ohm
DC circuit before the diode is about 1.0 ohm.
My meter leads registed 0.4 ohms which was deducted to obtain the above numbers. I still haven't found my milli-ohm meter.
Yes the Fluke should give decent readings vs those el cleapo $10 meters.Are you measuring the two sides individually to ground? So basically one wire (at connector) to the metal "frame" of the stator.
When you say before the diode are you saying to measure without the diode in the picture.
I've got a decent Fluke DVOM so I should be able to measure this.
Well I chopped the diode off and I checked resistance in both directions. Nothing. I should have some current in one direction but not the other. I have a diode pigtail ordered. I'll take a chance that the diode is the issue.Yes the Fluke should give decent readings vs those el cleapo $10 meters.
Individually of course as they are two different circuits. And yes of course without the diode. Basically you are just looking either a dead short to ground or or an open circuit. Individual winding shorted to each will generally very hard to detect at this level of resistance. These reading are from an old known good stator. (1994-98 vintage stator)
Also varying amount of meter lead tip pressure will also vary the reading as you breakthrough the oxidization layers of the contact points.
It is to note that on first version of these dual circuits stator Briggs would fuse the circuit to them which was a 7.5 fuse but that was quickly deleted from the circuits. Original the fuse was to save the stator and diode from reverse voltage application. IE the battery being connected backwards. But most are not fused and are just fried. They figured the one that installs a battery backwards should pay a price for doing it.