So I was noticing that at full throttle, my electrical system was putting out almost 16 volts, which I figure is enough to fry a battery in short order. I did some further research, and realized most of these old outboards were not equipped with voltage regulators... on all but the oldest Homelite/Bearcats, they were optional. The stator generates three pulses of AC current, and sends it to the rectifier to be converted to DC. A hi/low switch cuts one of the pulses from the stator out for lower load conditions, but still it is designed such that the battery is where all the excess power goes, and it will boil if too much power is available. I suppose that was considered no big deal back in the day, but it is not compatible with maintenance free batteries.
Long story short, I realized that the stator/rectifier/regulator style charging system in a motorcycle is very similar to that on the Homelite, and purchased a modern Mosfet chip controlled recifier/regulator combination made for a Suzuki motorcycle. It has a 50 amp peak capacity with a 30 amp rating. About the most the Homelite will put out is in the 20-30 amp range. Installation was simple, remove the old rectifier, splice the three wires from the stator to the yellow wires feeding the new regulator, hook one of the green wires to ground (the regulator has two) and one of the red wires (again, there are two) to the positive post on the starter relay.
Initial testing shows the system working as predicted, which should protect the Petronix unit from high voltage, result in more accurate gauge readings, and improve the battery longevity.
Dave
Homelite Regulator.jpg
Long story short, I realized that the stator/rectifier/regulator style charging system in a motorcycle is very similar to that on the Homelite, and purchased a modern Mosfet chip controlled recifier/regulator combination made for a Suzuki motorcycle. It has a 50 amp peak capacity with a 30 amp rating. About the most the Homelite will put out is in the 20-30 amp range. Installation was simple, remove the old rectifier, splice the three wires from the stator to the yellow wires feeding the new regulator, hook one of the green wires to ground (the regulator has two) and one of the red wires (again, there are two) to the positive post on the starter relay.
Initial testing shows the system working as predicted, which should protect the Petronix unit from high voltage, result in more accurate gauge readings, and improve the battery longevity.
Dave
Homelite Regulator.jpg
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