Part III, final reassembly…
The diode pack has arrived, well, it arrived yesterday but I didn’t know, postie had left it in the garaged my dear missus forgot to tell me!
Old and New…
First step is to screw it into the rear housing
Then offer up the stator, making sure the three phase wires match up to the diode hoops and are fed through and bent into place.
Use a 25w soldering iron and solder them up
Time now to fit the front cover and bearing to the rotor, it should just push on.
Place the washer raised ridge down facing the bearing, this is an interference fit and will require tapping down with a deep socket, an old spark plug socket will do.
Here I ran into the first of two problems. The rotor was stiff to turn, not terribly so but it was stiff and it should turn freely. What I found was there is enough moment in the plate that holds the bearing in for it to not be central and so rub against the rotor shaft…..this plate:
So I had to pull the blasted thing off again re-centre the plate and reassemble! This time is span freely.
My next issue, like a muppet, I’d forgotten how the washers went back on despite my photo from earlier! If they don’t go back in order the pulley dishes won’t mate with the key and the nut won’t go on fully. 2 hours later of mucking about, tea breaks, head scratching I remember there is an exploded diagram in the Haynes manual! Doh! “Assembly is the reverse of the disassembly” yeah but not if you are a muppet!
The fan blades go on first followed by the large washer the right way around like this…
Then the thicker washer
Pully halves/dishes
Then the last washer, split washer and nut.
Now reassemble the back and front parts and screw back together, note the orientation of the cutout to the mounting lug…
The last thing is to put the regulator back in…it pushes against a spring contact on the diode pack, it needs a bit of force to go back in, hold it in place and get the screws in. I’ve reused my old one, the new one I’ll keep as a spare.
I bolted it back into the car and connected it all up, started the car and the bloody warning light stayed on! Gave it a few blips on the throttle, light still on, %$^%^%&^$£&^
Got out of the car, attached my volt meter to the battery and blipped the throttle again, the voltage jumped up! Yes, it works, not sure why it took a bit of time to get going, I may have not had the regulator brushes seated correctly on the slip rings. I get 12.5v on idle and 14v now at 2000rpm and the light is now out!
Result. Im one very happy (and relieved) bunny.
Costs:
Un-needed regulator £12
Diode pack £23
New bearings £8
6” Puller £16
Total £59