spark sometimes on my 72 johnson 125

natedawg

Petty Officer 3rd Class
Joined
Feb 4, 2006
Messages
82
took my boat out this weekend and on friday it ran great for the half hour we were on the lake thne on saturday there was no spark...i was told that the battery could be the prob. but i want to be sure... any way of knowing for sure? if i take and put a new battery in it and it work am i good to go or should i look at any thing else?<br /><br />thanks nate
 

OBJ

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Dec 27, 2002
Messages
10,161
Re: spark sometimes on my 72 johnson 125

You need a top notch battery for this system Nate. The battery must be at twelve volts. <br /><br />The ignition runs off the battery voltage. The charging system keeps the battery up. It's certainly possible that your rectifier failed and didn't keep the battery alive. Have you put the battery on charge or checked it for being fully charged?
 

natedawg

Petty Officer 3rd Class
Joined
Feb 4, 2006
Messages
82
Re: spark sometimes on my 72 johnson 125

yup i had the battery on the charger for a while and it works now where can i find the rectifer? it works well when its got a full charge. i really new to the boating world so any info would help alot.how do i check to see if the rectifer works i have alot of experince with cars bike and dunebuggys so i can do it all myself i have the tools and know how...<br /><br />love this site, great people thanks!
 

OBJ

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Dec 27, 2002
Messages
10,161
Re: spark sometimes on my 72 johnson 125

Nate, disconnect the rectifier leads from the terminal strip. Take an ohm meter and connect it across one of the yellow leads and the red lead. If you connect the red lead to the red wire and the black lead to the yellow wire, you should get a reading on the meter. Now reverse the leads. You should get no reading. Do this for both yellow wires.<br /><br />If either lead fails the test, rectifier is bad.
 

Joe Reeves

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Feb 24, 2002
Messages
13,262
Re: spark sometimes on my 72 johnson 125

(Battery Capacitance Dischage Powerpack Test)<br />Various OMC Engines - 1968 to 1972)<br />(J. Reeves)<br /><br />Purchase a small 12v bulb at your local automotive parts store (the 12v bulb is to look like a flashlight bulb, not a headlight bulb). Solder two wires to that bulb, one to the side of the bulb (ground), and the other to the positive point. You might use a bulb of a somewhat lower voltage to obtain a brighter glow... just a suggestion.<br /><br />Remove the spark plugs. With the key in the on position, make sure that you have 12v going to the pack at the terminal block (purple wire). Now, connect the ground wire from the bulb to any powerhead ground. Connect the wire from the positive point of that bulb to the powerpack wire that is connected to the coil wire on the terminal board (blue wire). <br /><br />Crank the engine and observe that bulb closely (CLOSELY!). If that bulb glows even the slightest bit, the powerpack is okay. It may be a very dim glow... just so it glows! If it doesn't glow, the pack has failed. <br /><br />Keep in mind, that type powerpack (Battery Capacitance Discharge) demands a top notch battery of at least 70 amp hours. Any less will, in time, cause powerpack failure.<br /><br />(Small Rectifier Test)<br />(J. Reeves)<br /><br />Remove the rectifier wires from the terminal block. Using a ohm meter, connect the black lead of the ohm meter to the rectifier base (ground), then one by one, connect the red lead of the ohm meter to the yellow, yellow/gray, then the red wire (some rectifiers may also have a fourth yellow/blue wire. If so connect to that also). Now, reverse the ohm meter leads and check those same wires again. You should get a reading in one direction, and none at all in the other direction. <br /><br />Now, connect the black lead of the ohm meter to the red wire. One by one, connect the red lead of the ohm meter to the yellow, yellow/gray, and if present, the yellow/blue wire. Then reverse the leads, checking the wires again. Once more, you should get a reading in one direction and none in the other. <br /><br />Note that the reading obtained from the red rectifier wire will be lower then what is obtained from the other wires. <br /><br />Any deviation from the "Reading", "No Reading" as above indicates a faulty rectifier. Note that a rectifier will not tolerate reverse polarity. Simply touching the battery with the cables in the reverse order or hooking up a battery charger backwards will blow the diodes in the rectifier assy immediately.
 
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