Author Topic: Regulator Box  (Read 2058 times)

Offline Buster1450

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Regulator Box
« on: 13.01. 2011 10:04 »
Hi Chaps
 Could someone tell me if the regulator box on an A10 be isolated from the earthed frame of the bike?

Cheers,

Offline LJ.

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Re: Regulator Box
« Reply #1 on: 13.01. 2011 10:13 »
Hi Buster... No, it is not isolated at all and I can see why you ask that. The rubber bushes on either side of the regulator are there to act as a cushioning effect and not as an isolator.
Ride Safely Lads! LJ.
**********************
1940 BSA M20 500cc Girder/Rigid- (SOLD)
1947 BSA M21 600cc Girder/Rigid-Green
1949 BSA A7   500cc Girder/Plunger Star Twin-(SOLD)
1953 BSA B33  500cc Teles/Plunger-Maroon
1961 BSA A10  650cc Golden Flash-Blue
1961 BSA A10  650cc Golden Flash-Red

Offline lawnmowerman

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Re: Regulator Box
« Reply #2 on: 13.01. 2011 12:12 »
There was a topic during the last week where the advice was that the frame of the regulator is not earthed to the frame and is at a floating potential - maybe the rubber mounts serve the purpose of insulating the reg frame from the bike frame and also insulate from vibration.

Jim
1959 A10 SR
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Offline fido

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Re: Regulator Box
« Reply #3 on: 13.01. 2011 13:36 »
I can't see any advantage to isolating it. I would have thought the earthed metal screening would help prevent the bike from causing interference on radios and tellies.

Offline Buster1450

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Re: Regulator Box
« Reply #4 on: 13.01. 2011 16:39 »
There was a topic during the last week where the advice was that the frame of the regulator is not earthed to the frame and is at a floating potential - maybe the rubber mounts serve the purpose of insulating the reg frame from the bike frame and also insulate from vibration.

Jim

Thats the reason i asked the question as not sure myself.

Online trevinoz

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Re: Regulator Box
« Reply #5 on: 13.01. 2011 21:16 »
The rubber mounts were only introduced with the RB107 regulator.
The early MCR1 & MCR2 were bolted to the frame with no rubber cushion.
The "frame" or "chassis" of the regulator is directly connected to the "D" output of the generator.
Trev.

Offline Stu55Flash

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Re: Regulator Box
« Reply #6 on: 13.01. 2011 21:28 »
I'm reading the question differently; the floating regulator frame is connected to the 'D' terminal on the dynamo. The regulator frame is not connected to the bike chassis. It should be electrically insulted in the regulator.

Stu
"Keep a distance from lady "L" drivers in cars. Some are not mechanically minded, are slow to acquire road sense, an are apt to panic..." The Pitman Book of the BSA Twins.
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Offline wilko

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Re: Regulator Box
« Reply #7 on: 13.01. 2011 22:31 »
The reg can be solidly mounted if you want it that way which tells you it doesn't matter if the body touches or not. There is a separate earth wire marked "E" anyway .

Online RichardL

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Re: Regulator Box
« Reply #8 on: 14.01. 2011 00:08 »
Not going into the isolation question, don't need my 2p on that point.However, regarding screening, don't get confused. There is not enough current cursing through the regulator (as is present in the plug wires when the magneto dumps its load once a revolution) to cause the kind of electromagnetic field necessary for electromagnetic interference in radios. Even if there were, the aluminum regulator cap affords no shielding to electromagnetic waves, being non-ferrous. Now then, I believe the spark itself is another issue. I think it is a source of mostly electrostatic energy, which can be shielded by aluminum.

I know. "So, what?" and "Who cares?"

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Online Triton Thrasher

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Re: Regulator Box
« Reply #9 on: 14.01. 2011 07:57 »
A car dynamo could certainly cause interference on that car's radio.