I picked up an 802a and have 60 hz but only about 20 volts output. It will make 120 volts if the master switch is held in the start position, but drops back down to 20 volts in the run position. The genset did not have the quad winding fuse modification, but does now. The some of the diodes in the voltage regulator quad winding circuit were fried. I replaced the voltage regulator with a known good regulator and still have the same problem. The quad winding resistance is low at 0.5 ohms versus the 0.9 to 1.2 as stated in the manual, so i presume the quad winding is shorted and not supplying voltage to the regulator.
My questions are 1) What voltage does the quad winding supply to the regulator, if it is in the manual I have not found it? 2) Has anyone bypassed the quad winding to supply an alternate source of AC voltage to the regulator either temporarily to test everything else or permanently? 3) Am I correct in subtracting the multimeter's wire resistance of 0.7 ohms for the multimeter I am using, from the displayed resistance reading (1.2 ohms) of the quad winding. 1.2ohms (reading) -0.7 ohms (multimeter wire resistance) to give me the 0.5 ohms I am using for the actual quad winding resistance?
Thanks
My questions are 1) What voltage does the quad winding supply to the regulator, if it is in the manual I have not found it? 2) Has anyone bypassed the quad winding to supply an alternate source of AC voltage to the regulator either temporarily to test everything else or permanently? 3) Am I correct in subtracting the multimeter's wire resistance of 0.7 ohms for the multimeter I am using, from the displayed resistance reading (1.2 ohms) of the quad winding. 1.2ohms (reading) -0.7 ohms (multimeter wire resistance) to give me the 0.5 ohms I am using for the actual quad winding resistance?
Thanks