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Denso Alternator dropping offline

Yes - it was a PP alternator, the cavity in the SRE was worn, and the bearing had "spun". Root cause was unknown, but speculated to be heat related.

There is/was nothing visibly different in the SRE/bearing assembly or parts between the PlanePower and Genuine ND, WAI/Transpo, B&C or other clones. There is no retention of the rear bearing in these 106MM units -- press fit and wave washer.

It's possible that the aluminum alloy used in the casting is different -- maybe it had a different response to heat (maybe a little more or less of any number of alloys in the mix.)...
Thanks. I said bearing retainer, but meant bearing cavity. Yes, words matter, I know.
 
There is/was nothing visibly different in the SRE/bearing assembly or parts between the PlanePower and Genuine ND, WAI/Transpo, B&C or other clones. There is no retention of the rear bearing in these 106MM units -- press fit and wave washer.
Most alternators I have seen only press one bearing into the case. The other is usually a slip fit with a wave washer to keep axial compression of the bearing to keep it spinning. are these NDs different in that regard? I know that they can also keep the shaft a slip fit as an alternative.
 
Most alternators I have seen only press one bearing into the case. The other is usually a slip fit with a wave washer to keep axial compression of the bearing to keep it spinning. are these NDs different in that regard? I know that they can also keep the shaft a slip fit as an alternative.

It seems that ND (and all the clones) have two SRE bearing retention strategies. The 106MM case and below uses a press fit/wave washer into the SRE, and 118MM case and above uses a steel plate with 3 studs and screw, the bearing is pressed into this plate/collar (pic).

IMG_1865.jpg

The above retention is superior as it is Steel (bearing) into Steel retention (Same expansion rates, etc.) It's also more serviceable -- if the bearing does spin, you can just replace the plate instead of the entire casting. Note the rectangular holes for stator wire pass thrus -- these accommodate the vibration isolation inserts, no more broken stator wires. And, the stator wires have proper terminations for connection to the rectifier; not the BS "home-electrical bare-wire-under-screwhead" connection that the 106MM and smaller units utilize.
 
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It seems that ND (and all the clones) have two SRE bearing retention strategies. The 106MM case and below uses a press fit/wave washer into the SRE, and 118MM case and above uses a steel plate with 3 studs and screw, the bearing is pressed into this plate/collar (pic).

View attachment 100922

The above retention is superior as it is Steel (bearing) into Steel retention (Same expansion rates, etc.) It's also more serviceable -- if the bearing does spin, you can just replace the plate instead of the entire casting. Note the square holes for stator wire pass thrus -- these accommodate the vibration isolation inserts, no more broken stator wires. And, the stator wires have proper terminations for connection to the rectifier; not the BS "home-electrical bare-wire-under-screwhead" connection that the 106MM and smaller units utilize.
Thanks for the detail here! So nice to have an alternator expert "on staff" here at VAF.
 
PP could do this on the 60 amp if they would spend .02% more (of the sales price) on the manufactured cost. Alternatively, there are a lot of Denso alternators with the expansion rings on the outside of the SRE bearing outer race. It solves the problem. I got a quote from the bearing manufacturer (NTN in Taiwan) for these bearings of less than $3 but I would have to buy 5000, so decided not to do that. Mostly because they would not share the specifications of the original bearings and I was guessing. An unaddressed issue is that the bearing design is not patented for the US.

Thanks for continuing the alternator design/failure analysis effort.
 
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