Hello,
Have a 2003 Yamaha F225 that was showing high charging voltage on the volt gauge at 3500 rpm over the past several trips. Showing high 15 - 16 volts cruising. Checked it with my multimeter at the battery today at the dock. And at the battery is is actually about 1 volt higher than the dash guage! At idle it is 14.4 and about 3000 rpm it is 16+ volts. So scared to think what it's cranking at higher cruise speeds. I used the multimeter to check battery terminals, as well as on starting cables, and where they terminate on the engine, ...and all the same volt readings..so doubt any loose connections. I haven't had any problems burning out any electronics, lights, or the radio...all seems fine.
The battery came with the boat. Never changed it out and I have a few season on it myself. Never had a problem with it...starts no problem, and runs electronics with the engine off for hours. It is a marine cranking battery and has caps so it's not maintenance free. (Have three blue top optima's beside it to drive my 101lb *****ing motor but they are completely separate.) Never pulled the caps and check electrolyte..yet. No other sign of boiling over visable. I expect to give it a "feel' after the next run and see if it is getting hot...but haven't done that yet.
Read tons of posts about possible rectifier/regulator problem. However, because I don't know the real condition or age of this battery, I am posting today to ask if the battery itself could cause such over charging if there is something wrong with it? Can't find a straight answer on that.
Also, just how common is it to have a rectifer/regulator failing on a 2003 vintage F225 with about 450 hours on it?
Finally, before I start dumping money on a battery and/or regulator, is there any other elements that would result in high charging voltage that I should look for? Any recommendation on how to approach this?
Thanks
Have a 2003 Yamaha F225 that was showing high charging voltage on the volt gauge at 3500 rpm over the past several trips. Showing high 15 - 16 volts cruising. Checked it with my multimeter at the battery today at the dock. And at the battery is is actually about 1 volt higher than the dash guage! At idle it is 14.4 and about 3000 rpm it is 16+ volts. So scared to think what it's cranking at higher cruise speeds. I used the multimeter to check battery terminals, as well as on starting cables, and where they terminate on the engine, ...and all the same volt readings..so doubt any loose connections. I haven't had any problems burning out any electronics, lights, or the radio...all seems fine.
The battery came with the boat. Never changed it out and I have a few season on it myself. Never had a problem with it...starts no problem, and runs electronics with the engine off for hours. It is a marine cranking battery and has caps so it's not maintenance free. (Have three blue top optima's beside it to drive my 101lb *****ing motor but they are completely separate.) Never pulled the caps and check electrolyte..yet. No other sign of boiling over visable. I expect to give it a "feel' after the next run and see if it is getting hot...but haven't done that yet.
Read tons of posts about possible rectifier/regulator problem. However, because I don't know the real condition or age of this battery, I am posting today to ask if the battery itself could cause such over charging if there is something wrong with it? Can't find a straight answer on that.
Also, just how common is it to have a rectifer/regulator failing on a 2003 vintage F225 with about 450 hours on it?
Finally, before I start dumping money on a battery and/or regulator, is there any other elements that would result in high charging voltage that I should look for? Any recommendation on how to approach this?
Thanks
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