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Help!!!! Bedford electrics


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May I pick your collective brains re my Bedford OX?

 

Whilst my son was driving last weekend, the ignition light came on and stayed on, and the ammeter sits steadfastly at zero. I tested the dynamo as per the manual, and got a reading fluctuating between 0-4 volts, manual says 15 point something. I therefore concluded that the dynamo was at fault, and ordered a reconditioned one from Chris Morter. Having fitted the new one today, the problem remains, except from the new dynamo I get a steady reading of 0.5 volts. The ignition light still stays on and the ammeter is rock-solid at zero. With auto-electrics not being my strong point, I am now baffled - it is distinctly possible that the replacement dynamo is faulty, but before I send it back, am I missing something? Could a different fault give the symptoms of a non-charging dynamo?

 

Any ideas gratefully received.

 

Mike

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If you did polarise the Dynamo, one was it the right way, two , was the regulator box still connected? If the regulator box was on when polarised, you may have blown the box. http://www.dynamoregulatorconversions.com/polarising-a-dynamo.php But DO NOT connect regulator. If you don't polarise you won't get charge. Other obvoius one, is the belt tensioning correctly, check earth line.

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Thanks for your input, guys.

To update - oops, had forgotten to polarise the dynamo (in my defence, I have only ever changed one dynamo, and that was around 30 years ago!). I have now done this, but it has not made a difference. Ignition light stays on with engine running at around 1000 - 1200 revs, ammeter sits on zero (it does show a discharge if I put the headlights on), and testing the dynamo output as per the manual, it still shows an output of around 0.5 - 0.6 volts. Strangely, so far the battery does not seem to be going flat. I have checked the dynamo earth with a continuity tester, and this seems ok.

 

I am still tempted to think that the replacement dynamo is faulty, but obviously there are other possibilities. I can't get in to the regulator to inspect visually, as the vacuum tank for the wipers is in the way and it's now raining, so I have given up for now. Does anyone know how to test the regulator, by the way, as the manual seems rather reticent on this point? As far as I know, however, it I extremely unusual for a regulator to develop a fault.

 

I would welcome your thoughts.

 

Mike

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As far as I know, however, it I extremely unusual for a regulator to develop a fault.

 

I would welcome your thoughts.

 

Mike

 

Hi Mike,

These CAV regulators can give problems, related to age and its construction. I have even had nos ones give problems. The electrician who did my work found a way of substituting a more modern Lucas regulator internal workings into the CAV box, and with it set up on his test rig with the dynamo, performed perfectly. Had quite a number of them done successfully.

 

regards, Richard

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First thing I would check is the fuse in the regulator box, you say you can't get to it ?

That's your first job, if the fuse wire is ok, pull out the fuse and clean the contacts, had a similar problem with my MW, just needed the contacts cleaned.

 

Regards

 

Jules

 

Thanks for your input, guys.

To update - oops, had forgotten to polarise the dynamo (in my defence, I have only ever changed one dynamo, and that was around 30 years ago!). I have now done this, but it has not made a difference. Ignition light stays on with engine running at around 1000 - 1200 revs, ammeter sits on zero (it does show a discharge if I put the headlights on), and testing the dynamo output as per the manual, it still shows an output of around 0.5 - 0.6 volts. Strangely, so far the battery does not seem to be going flat. I have checked the dynamo earth with a continuity tester, and this seems ok.

 

I am still tempted to think that the replacement dynamo is faulty, but obviously there are other possibilities. I can't get in to the regulator to inspect visually, as the vacuum tank for the wipers is in the way and it's now raining, so I have given up for now. Does anyone know how to test the regulator, by the way, as the manual seems rather reticent on this point? As far as I know, however, it I extremely unusual for a regulator to develop a fault.

 

I would welcome your thoughts.

 

Mike

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  • 3 weeks later...

Still no further forward with this, mainly due to lousy weather. Have polarised dynamo as per instructions, but still only getting around 0.5 volts output at dynamo terminals, with or without dynamo fuse in place. I am beginning to suspect that the dynamo still isn't correctly polarised. I note that the instructions in the link are for a Lucas dynamo, and I wonder if the CAV unit fitted to the OX is wired differently? I cannot find instructions for polarising a CAV dynamo on the internet, and all three Bedford manuals I possess omit this procedure. Does anyone know the correct procedure? Do I simply try reversing the polarity to the earth and F terminals or is this likely to damage the dynamo?

 

Any help would be appreciated.

Mike.

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