hkeiner
Lieutenant Junior Grade
- Joined
- Oct 17, 2006
- Messages
- 1,055
I bought two new CDI voltage regulators for installation on my 1996 Mercury 150HP outboard. The regulators are sandwhiched between the engine and a thick metal plate upon which the coils are attached. Two bolts per regulator hold everything in place. There is no ground wire on the voltage regulators and grounding is accomplished, I believe, by the physical contact between the body of the voltage regulators and the motor, bolts, and thick metal plate to which they come in contact.
Thermal grease question:
The instructions that came with the CDI regulators advise the use of a thermal grease for installation. I am not quite clear, however, on where to put the thermal grease without negatively affecting the the grounding of the regulators. I understand that thermal grease does not conduct electicity and fear that using it improperly could affect the grounding of the regulators. I believe that the thermal grease could be placed between the regulators and the engine (thus allowing the heat from the regulator to transfer to the motor block) and NOT between the regulators and the metal plate (to allow proper grounding of the regulators to the think metal plate). Is that right? Alternatively, does anyone advise NOT using thermal grease at all in order to better ensure a good ground?
Ground wire question:
I called my local Mercury boat shop about the risk of having a bad ground when using thermal grease and they said that their Mercury OEM voltage regulators have a separate ground wire (which the CDI regulators do not) and advised that I use the OEM regulators. Because I already bought the CDI regulators, I prefer to use the CDI's that I have. Does anyone have an thoughts on installing an additonal ground wire, say between the bolt heads for each regulator and then to the engine block?
(notes: I generally do not like to jury-rig or redesign things and prefer to follow manufacture's specifications. However, since the CDI and OEM regulators are apparently different in regards to the the ground wire setup this might be one situation where it may be appopriate. Also, I once tried using dielectric grease on the posts of the battery in my car and it kept the car from starting. I had to clean the posts for the juice to flow again. As a result, I am skeptical that sufficient amount of thermal grease will get squeezed out to make a good GROUND contact when the parts are tightened together.)
Thanks