| Mar 04 |
 The electrical control box hides behind these covers - the top box covers the Lucas type RF30 regulator; the lower box covers the terminals and fuses.With the covers off, the regulator and fuses look a bit iffy - especially as two of the fuses have been wired across ! |
| Mar 04 |
 The twin wire connected over the top of the others is from the dynamo - it really needs a thicker red lead to carry twenty amps. The dynamo was rewired with 8amp cable for the field (green) and 22amp cable (brown) for the dynamo output.Fortunately the junction boxes were easy to get at which made fault tracing easy. |
| Mar 04 |
I found that the auxiliary fuse blew if I operated the horn at the same time as the right trafficator.The reason was found later - there was short in the wiring to the trafficator switch & horn push which someone had tried to "repair" by putting ever thicker fuses in - and ultimately wired across !
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| Apr 04 |
 Corroded cut-out, regulator and fuses were dismantled, cleaned and adjusted.A nasty intermittent charging fault was due to one of the fuse connectors having corroded underneath the control box - off with the box and the terminal connection remade with new screw and Araldite to reinforce the burnt bakelite base. |
| Apr 04 |
Very pleasing when it all worked first time and dynamo/regulator gave a steady charge to the battery. Regulator adjusted (cut-out contacts held open) to 15 volts which gives a healthy charge. Max charge - ignition load only - 10 amps;
with headlights on (total drain = 8 amps) the dynamo still gave 8 - 10 amps charge. |