One of the fellows on one of the outer islands had a problem with his 7500w petrol genny.... It's broke he said.
He tossed it in a boat and bought it to this island, and I had a look at it......took a bit to tussel it out, but here it is.

After I encouraged it to fall to bits, I found the wiring to be suspect.

It's not supposed to look like this, so it was time to pull it to bits, for a look see.
Below is the rotor out of one of this unit. It is simply two coils of wire (one each side) connected to the slip rings.
This effectively means any emf driven into the rotor windings as a DC current makes a spinning magnet in the center of the stator coils. It has slip rings to energise these coils, and by changing the current in the coils we change the flux in the rotor core. This will be what we use to induce current in the stator for driving the 240v output, the 12v battery charger for external batteries, and the third coil group which power the Automatic Voltage Regulator that in turn powers the rotor via the slip rings.
It relies on remnant magnetism from the previous use, to set up a very small voltage (.7v or more) to start putting power into the AVR, which in turn drives this into the rotor, which makes more field, so more flux into the drive coil whose EMF goes back into the AVR and around it goes. I quickly gets up to a point where there is enough voltage in the drive coil to power the AVR to drive the rotor to drive the stator to full voltage..... whew...
Looks like this:

More gory shots of the stator.


Here we are part way through stripping out the old:

The sick coil is the drive coil for the AVR. The AVR has a few wires going to it, two from the drive coil for it's own power supply, two go to a sense coil (really a tapped segment of the output coil) and two wires for the brush outputs.
This coil set used 8 slots in the stator, made up of 4 coils in a 180 degree orientation.
Sadly, I got so interested in winding and rewiring and sealing, I forgot to take any more pics until near the end
Here it is rewound and almost back together:

nearer the end

And the final result:

So a new AVR from China (50 bucks) and a few hours work and it's back in business.
At this point it all turned nasty.
I got this idea to check if the original AVR was really sick..... so I replaced the new one with the old one to test it.
It sprang into life, and showed 240v..... so I mused I'd wasted the blokes money buying the AVR..... oh well, we have a spare.....
But no,.......... smoke started billowing out of the alternator and so I realised too late that it was all in vain.
Now I know what cooked the drive winding... the AVR shorted internally, and a single diode stayed alive. The fet had gone where fets go when they are unhappy, but not short.
The end result was that the AVR drew max current from the drive coil, drove the stator, and shorted the drive coil at the same time......and cooked it...... again.... grrrr.
So I pulled it apart again, stripped out the new burnt coils, rewound another set, put it back in, put in the new AVR and stood back.
It fired it up nicely , the voltage stood at 240v... and I waited..... no smoke...... still no smoke.
So I decided to drive a load.... the worst load I had for it was the big 6kw inverter charger... so I hooked it onto the shore power input and equalised the batteries for the next 4 hours.... no problems so I'm calling this fixed.
Alls well that ends well.... just another day.
...... but no....... news travels fast, and another burnt out wreck arrived only a few hours ago...... maybe I'll remember the camera, as it is interesting how we wind the coils on a jig, and place them in the stator......... next time.
...................oztules
Edit,
He'll be charged the $50 for the coil, and must bring a few cans of beer so we can drink to it's good health.... I'm sure he'll be fine with that too.