havoc_squad
Senior Chief Petty Officer
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2011
- Messages
- 739
I have a 1990 90hp V4 crossflow that I recently finished rebuilding and have been ironing out the minor bugs identified.
(1 hour or less of run time, under break in procedure being gentle checking things out on the hose)
I noticed that the tachometer failed to register after I finished checking all the essentials first on the first 15 min run which held a steady clean idle at 1000 rpm.
I know for a fact it worked correctly before the engine rebuild.
Everything was hooked up per the OEM service manual instructions before any power was applied to anything.
All clean battery and wiring harness terminals firmly secured to posts. Standard wet cell marine battery. Battery terminals were never reversed.
I grabbed the CDI electronics troubleshooting guide and did the following while all wire connections properly attached while running:
1. At 1000 rpms, verified purple wire voltage at wire terminal to regulator/rectifier was close (I can't remember it exactly, but I believe it was around 12.5 volts with 0.25 volt difference)
2. With engine at 1500 rpm, check the difference in voltage of each of the yellow wires (yellow solid vs yellow/gray stripe) against ground. (Using DVA adapter)
17 volts on solid yellow, 32 volts on yellow/gray stripe (or it was vice versa)
So, my question is, on the directed step 4 listed on CDI troubleshooting guide safe to do on the OMC/BRP regulator/rectifier? That is, make a mark on both of the bottom yellow/gray stripe wires and on one side of the buss swap/exchange the yellow solid for the yellow/gray stripe. Then restart the motor and perform the same test at 1500rpm.
The terminal with the mark that has the lowest voltage in comparison is the component that is at fault, correct?
As a bonus, I did step 5 after step 2 to see what the tachometer was showing and oddly enough, it was showing 8 volts on DVA adapter. Looked up and the tach was working for a bit. Did a couple other things and it was gone. Checked it again and the voltage dropped to like 1 to 2 volts.
Don't know if the voltage being supplied to tach got shut off when the battery got close to being charged up as a consequence of whatever damage done to the regulator (I assume).
Is there anything I should think about checking after I replace the regulator/rectifier that can be a hidden threat to them?
(1 hour or less of run time, under break in procedure being gentle checking things out on the hose)
I noticed that the tachometer failed to register after I finished checking all the essentials first on the first 15 min run which held a steady clean idle at 1000 rpm.
I know for a fact it worked correctly before the engine rebuild.
Everything was hooked up per the OEM service manual instructions before any power was applied to anything.
All clean battery and wiring harness terminals firmly secured to posts. Standard wet cell marine battery. Battery terminals were never reversed.
I grabbed the CDI electronics troubleshooting guide and did the following while all wire connections properly attached while running:
1. At 1000 rpms, verified purple wire voltage at wire terminal to regulator/rectifier was close (I can't remember it exactly, but I believe it was around 12.5 volts with 0.25 volt difference)
2. With engine at 1500 rpm, check the difference in voltage of each of the yellow wires (yellow solid vs yellow/gray stripe) against ground. (Using DVA adapter)
17 volts on solid yellow, 32 volts on yellow/gray stripe (or it was vice versa)
So, my question is, on the directed step 4 listed on CDI troubleshooting guide safe to do on the OMC/BRP regulator/rectifier? That is, make a mark on both of the bottom yellow/gray stripe wires and on one side of the buss swap/exchange the yellow solid for the yellow/gray stripe. Then restart the motor and perform the same test at 1500rpm.
The terminal with the mark that has the lowest voltage in comparison is the component that is at fault, correct?
As a bonus, I did step 5 after step 2 to see what the tachometer was showing and oddly enough, it was showing 8 volts on DVA adapter. Looked up and the tach was working for a bit. Did a couple other things and it was gone. Checked it again and the voltage dropped to like 1 to 2 volts.
Don't know if the voltage being supplied to tach got shut off when the battery got close to being charged up as a consequence of whatever damage done to the regulator (I assume).
Is there anything I should think about checking after I replace the regulator/rectifier that can be a hidden threat to them?
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