Originally posted by 99yam40
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Rectifier caught fire…now what?
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So my next question is, where do I go from here? Obviously I am ordering a new RR. But so I simply plug it back in and fire thing up? As I mentioned before, I don’t see any other damage or bad wires. Is it safe to assume this drained my battery and is the cause of my issues? I bought the boat last fall and did not realize bad battery connections could fry the RR. It had some pretty sad looking connectors but they held. Knowing what I know now, I replaced them with new, sturdy ones that I will lock washer and nut onto the terminal.
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Originally posted by boscoe99 View Post
If not a direct short and if conditions are right, the failure mode could allow say 20 amps of current flow. Not enough to blow a fuse but enough to melt the R/R. Or a fire to start.
I miss read his post and thought he said the fuse did not blow, but it did
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Originally posted by Gurkenrat View PostSo my next question is, where do I go from here? Obviously I am ordering a new RR. But so I simply plug it back in and fire thing up? As I mentioned before, I don’t see any other damage or bad wires. Is it safe to assume this drained my battery and is the cause of my issues? I bought the boat last fall and did not realize bad battery connections could fry the RR. It had some pretty sad looking connectors but they held. Knowing what I know now, I replaced them with new, sturdy ones that I will lock washer and nut onto the terminal.
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What are the odds that if I take it to a shop they just plug new RR in? At this point a defective RR explains most of not all of my problems (started with dead battery then engine died after 30 seconds, fuse blew and smoke under the cap). I guess my concern is that when I get the new RR, is there anything else that could have been defective that could have caused the old RR to cook and could do the same to this one? If so, what are the possibilities and can I test parts out to at least reduce the chances of cooking another RR? And as for the RR, new Yamaha one is quite pricey. I see plenty of them online for a lot cheaper but not sure I like the idea of an online RR considering what I just witnessed. Thoughts?
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Originally posted by Gurkenrat View PostWhat are the odds that if I take it to a shop they just plug new RR in? At this point a defective RR explains most of not all of my problems (started with dead battery then engine died after 30 seconds, fuse blew and smoke under the cap). I guess my concern is that when I get the new RR, is there anything else that could have been defective that could have caused the old RR to cook and could do the same to this one? If so, what are the possibilities and can I test parts out to at least reduce the chances of cooking another RR? And as for the RR, new Yamaha one is quite pricey. I see plenty of them online for a lot cheaper but not sure I like the idea of an online RR considering what I just witnessed. Thoughts?
I have no problem using non OEM parts but that is just me.
https://www.boats.net/product/yamaha...IaAmFbEALw_wcB
https://www.dbelectrical.com/product...230-22144.html
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Originally posted by Gurkenrat View PostThis is the back of the CDI. There are burn marks on the crankcase behind it from the RR. No melting but those bumps are suspicious. Any way to test this thing? I really don’t want to spend 1000.00 on a cdi
and some peak voltage reading into and out of the CDI cranking and different RPMs
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