Skywatcher wrote:Hi Jim
By your description, it sounds like you have a single wire stator. Remove the remains of the old diode, connect a volt meter set to AC volts between engine and stator wire. Run engine and see what the meter reads, should be well over 16 volts, possibly up to 24 VAC at governed RPM. If you get a good reading, simply solder a replacement diode onto the stator wire and connect back into the harness. A diode like Oregon 33-420 may work, or see what your local electronics repair shop can source for you. Hope this points you in the right direction,
Sky
Right: Check for stator AC output before wasting time replacing the diode. You may not need a stator winding if you get little bit lucky.
AND make sure you get the replacement diode polarity in the right direction. (If connected backwards the new diode may turn to dust when your battery or wire is connected and the stator will smoke. A 20 amp diode should be sufficient.
You might use a 10 amp inline fuse in the diode output wire for your first test after the diode is installed for additional circuit protection when you first connect the bat and start the machine.
AND the CV15S engine may be have two wires coming out of the high dollar stator winding from under the flywheel. (one of the wires may or may not be grounded) when you locate the two wires set your VOM or DMM on AC volts and connect across the two wires and check for AC volts per above. (or do a ohms test across the two wires with a ohmmeter, probably less than 10 ohms for a good reading.
Bad reading would be no reading at all on the ohmmeter or very low AC readings of less than 10 volts at high engine rpms'.
Stator price is $50 or more plus labor or installing
Diode is less than $5 and easy to install. (solder into place and use heat shrink tubing over the diode for insulation or a insulation sleeve)