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#1
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I cooked a couple of batterys in mine by over charging!! Thought my sears garage charger was great till i learned it does not shut off, charged them babys for 4 days!! when i went out they were boiling! now it has a timer on it!
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1986 V20 ![]() Old Fishermen never die, we just SMELL that way!! |
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#2
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some of the newer chargers will go into a float charge, they should be OK, I'd still put it on a timer just to make sure. The voltage regulator is located on the port side of the engine, just follow the water hose from the water pump(regulator is water cooled). Pull the two yellow wires from the stator and put an ohm meter on them, if its open, your stator is bad. I'll see if I can dig up the trouble shooting chart for the regulator(been while). If you end up just needing a balancer, I have a brand new one. Odds are you will need a balancer, startor and regulator so you're better off doing the alternator conversion
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#3
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If you are going to charge your batteries on a regular charger than by all means get a Battery hydrometer. (it looks like a turkey baster with a float inside of it). Open the caps on the batteries and suck out some acid into the tester until the float inside just starts to float. Read the color chart on the float where the fluid is and it will tell you how much your battery is charged. Shut off your charger once the float says the battery is charged and you'll have no problems using any kind of charger. Just remember that battery acid will eat your pants for lunch if you get any of it on them, so be careful and ALWAYS wear safety goggles.
For general info, I use a shop charger that charges my batteries @ 12 amps, and it has a timer built in so I never overcharge them.
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1987 V20 w/1987 150HP Yamaha on a Shoreland'r Trailer 1978 16.5 Airslot w/1996 120HP Force on a Four Winns trailer 1996 V21 w/1993 200HP Mercury on a Shoreline Trailer All towed by a 5.7L Hemi Durango. If God didn't have a purpose for us we wouldn't be here, so Live simply, Love generously, Care deeply, Speak kindly. (Leave the rest to God) ![]() Silence, in the face of evil, is itself evil. Not to speak is to speak, not to act is to act. God will not hold us guiltless. |
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#4
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If your alternator is only putting out 12.2 it's shot, that number should be over 14. A fully charged battery is about 12.7 volts, the charge has to be above that or no go.
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Doug 87 Cuddy with a 94 Black Max 200! & a 1983 Cuddy, looking for power. |
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#5
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Thanks for the responses - I just spent a bunch of $ getting a new kicker motor, so I'm not excited about spending on a new alternator but I need the batteries in good shape - planning to start hitting the ocean and don't need any problems.
Spare - did you find the trouble shooting chart for the regulator? I do have the Merc factory shop manual but haven't had time to dig into it. About what is a reasonable cost for a kit, if I need to go that way and can I buy it from you and get it drop shipped to me on the left coast?
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#6
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I'm with Garbubba, 12.2 is gonna leave you stranded. Check the voltage at the batteries with the engine running, don't trust your dash gauge. A good charging system is money in the bank in my opinion.
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1985 Wellcraft V-20, Evinrude ETEC 150: SOLD 1979 Marine Trader 44, twin Ford Lehman 120s 2006 Panga 14, Tohatsu 20 Last edited by bradford; 02-13-2015 at 09:35 AM. |
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#7
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I agree - stranded is in a car by the road - dead engine in boat is being carried by the current or blown by the wind toward the rocks. Just hoping I can find and fix the problem without having to buy all new, however unlikely that is.
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