Logo

rectifier replacement still no tach and charge.

Bent Rods001

New member
Hi, I am new here and I am having difficulties figuring this out...I have a 1989, 26ft mako 250.. It has a 1989 Johnson V6, 225 hp..Bought the boat back in early July of this year..Took it out a week later , went out 20- 25 miles off shore , boat ran great. But later on the way in ran poorly. Went from running 5000-5500 rpms to only 4000 if I was lucky...come to fine out carbs were dirty and clogged so purchaced carb kits for all six...paid someone that knows how to do and also replaced water pump as a precaution.. Anyway took boat that following weekend and ran awesome ..up un til this new problem . And this is really a pain in the rear..So while running great and as we were steaming back in I happen to notice that the tach stopped working and volt meter was only showing 12volts when normally it would read 14... So done a little digging and was told that rectifier/ regulator was bad...OK.. So I replace with a new one..but still no change..I purchaced a volt meter but not to sure on how or what to diagnose and what reads and what to set meter on....I also took a load tester and put on battery 1 and was in green but as soon as I put load on it went to the yellow where it says weak...So then I Put tester on battery 2 and it was in the green but once load was put on it headed towards yellow but stayed on line between green and weak.Batteries are 2 yes old ,that is what previous owner said ..So am looking for some help . I really would like to solve this before I put her to bed for the winter....Thank you and look forward to hearing from all on this issue..
 
Check the RED wire at the regulator/rectifier assy to make sure that 12v is being applied to the unit.

The stator under the flywheel supplies AC voltage to the regulator/rectifier assy where the rectifier converts that AC voltage to DC voltage. It is possible that the stator has failed and is not supplying that AC voltage. To check this out, do the following test and if the tachometer DOES NOT operate when wired as mentioned... suspect that the stator has failed.

If the stator is dripping a sticky looking substance down upon the timer base and powerhead assy, replace the stator as that alone indicates a stator melt down situation.

(Testing Tachometer With Water Cooled Regulator/Rectifier)
(J. Reeves)

A quick check is to simply plug in a another new tachometer as a piece of test equipment. If the new tach works properly and the old tach didn't, obviously the old tach is faulty.... but usually boaters don't carry around a spare tach (see below).

A faulty rectifier wouldn't damage the tachometer, the tachometer simply wouldn't work. This is due to the fact that the tachometer operates off of the charging system and the rectifier converts AC voltage to DC voltage, enabling the charging system. A faulty rectifier disables the charging system, and the tachometer simply doesn't register.

However.... those water cooled regulator/rectifiers that are used on the 35 ampere charging systems (and some others) bring into play a different type problem, and as you've probably found out, they are really a pain to troubleshoot via the proper procedure. There's an easier way.

The tachometer sending/receiving setup operates off of the gray wire at the tachometer. That same gray wire exists at the engine wiring harness which is connected to the engine electrical terminal strip. You'll see that there is a gray wire leading from the regulator/rectifier to that terminal strip, and that there is another gray wire attached to it. That other gray wire is the wire leading to the tachometer which is the one you're looking for.

NOTE: For the later models that DO NOT incorporate a wiring terminal strip, splicing into the "Yellow Wire" mentioned will be necessary.


Normally the Gray wire leading from the tachometer is attached at the terminal strip to another Gray wire which leads from the water cooled voltage regulator/rectifier...... remove the gray wire that leads to the tachometer. Now, find the two (2) yellow wires leading from the stator to that terminal strip. Hopefully one of them is either yellow/gray or is connected to a yellow/gray wire at the terminal strip. If so, connect the gray wire you removed previously to that yellow/gray terminal. Start the engine and check the tachometers operation, and if the tachometer operates as it should, then the regulator/rectifier is faulty and will require replacing. If the tachometer is still faulty, replace the tachometer.

If neither of the yellow wires from the stator is yellow/gray, and neither is attached to a yellow/gray wire, then attach that gray tachometer wire to either yellow stator wire, then the other yellow wire, checking the tachometer operation on both connections.

I've found this method to be a quick and efficient way of finding out which component is faulty.... the tachometer or the regulator/rectifier. It sounds drawn out but really only takes a very short time to run through. If the water cooled regulator/rectifier proves to be faulty, don't put off replacing it as they have been known to catch on fire with disastrous consequences.

Thousands of parts in my remaining stock. Not able to list them all. Let me know what you need and I'll look it up for you. Visit my eBay auction at:

http://shop.ebay.com/Joe_OMC32/m.html?_dmd=1&_ipg=50&_sop=12&_rdc=1
 
Back
Top