Pic 2 if your multimeter was on "Volts" then likely nothing, if on "Amps" you may have blown the multimeter, if on "Ohms" then you may have blown the multimeter. Alternators are pretty robust, the heavy red lead goes to the + connection on the battery, so if your multimeter was set for "Ohms" or "Amps" then you likely created a low resistance path to ground (the - connection) and perhaps damaged your meter but not the alternator. If the multimeter was set to "DC Volts" then you would have read battery voltage to ground, no damage to multimeter or alternator. Is there a problem with your machine or were you just "testing"?
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enb54,
I was having issues with the battery staying charged, so I was testing the battery for V when at idle and when the motor rpm was increased to 3000. No difference was seen, so I concluded that the alternator wasn't charging. So at that point for some unknown reason I decided to insert the red lead onto the red wire coming out of the connector attached to the alternator and place the negative lead to the bikes frame. Nothing came up on the alternator. I them turned the bike off, and since then the bike won't start. I'm stumped.
Supershooter