Ok reading on how easy it was to open these gen head up I went ahead and did it this morning. It helped that way have a ton of snow so no work today.
I took the stator off. I slid it on blocks then picked it up by hand and set it aside as my cherry picker was buried in another building with the entrance snowed in. I removed the rotor and rotated it about 180 degrees. 5 bolts hold it on so not exactly 180.
Upon snugging the bolts down after rotating it I noticed a slight scraping sound when the engine spun as I was tightening the bolts. It only scraped in one place for a couple inches in the rotation. I traced it down to the sensor under the starter making contact slightly, but only in the one spot on the flywheel. Backing the sensor off slightly fixed the problem.
There is a slight amount of play, possible when you tighten up the 5 bolts that hold the rotor flex plate to the flywheel. Sometimes if you have this kind of problem, it pays to remove the rotor and flew plate, look for dirt, Lacquer or anything else on the flywheel, where the flex plate indexes into the flywheel. It sets down into a milled out ring. When this happened to me, I left the 5 screws loose, and rotated the rotor/flywheel. I had removed the injectors to make this easier. You can see if the flex plate is a tad farther in one direction, then another. I used a rubber mallet to "adjust" the flex plate.Normally you never need to do this. It just fits right.
My question is how a machined flywheel could be hitting only in one place? Would that be the reason this thing had a bad vibration? I haven't reassembled the unit yet to test fire it. I need to find the place in the TM showing how to set that sensor depth and then readjust the governor before firing the unit up.
Don't screw with the Gov yet. The Magnetic Pickup is easy.
1. Back out the Mag pickup, 3-4 turns, (or remove it for inspection to make sure its not damaged)
2. Screw the Mag pickup in, until it bottoms out. Screw it out a turn, turn and a half. Hand tighten the locking nut.
3. Using a multimeter, set to AC voltage, measure between the two leads on the mag Pickup, while someone else turns the motor over with S10. With the engine turning, you want to read 2.5 to 3 volts AC. The closer to 3, the better. If the voltage is low, stop cranking the engine, turn the Mag pickup in a TAD, and then re tighten the nut. Keep doing this until you hit 2.5 to 3 volts. Like I said, 3 volts AC is best. Lock down the nut.
4. Test one more time, to make sure you didn't move the nut.
5. DO NOT turn in the Mag Pickup so far as to damage it, or you WILL be buying another one.
I supported the engine as shown in the picture. I worked good as I could vary the amount of lift.
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