Yea, basics have been covered, repeatedly. My particular boat is not grounded by the engine, it has it's own seperate ground cable. Everything else is grounded to posts in the grey box. I'm starting to consider multiple problems as an option.
I already tried disconnecting the stator and rectifier/regulator last week on the water and no change. I wanted to call it a bad or dirty crank trigger at that point, but I can't confirm without a labscope. Then I thought to myself, if it is not charging, then low voltage, blah blah blah see above post.... So I top charged the battery. (charger claimed 44% before charging) With a hot battery, retested, same results. I noticed the battery charger had a lazier digital meter, so I left it connected to monitor voltage. During the test, the mean never dropped below 12.2V after stating. So the mpem should have had plenty of power available.
This is one of those puzzles that I've been right on top of, but not quite able to crack. I think the last thing I can do at this point without a scope, is remove the magneto cover, peirce probe trigger wires as far back as I can, and check continuity while shaking them. Beyond that, it is a matter of flipping a coin and replacing the magneto or the mpem. Both have their merrits, mpem is easier to replace, magneto is cheaper...
:cheers:
Ernest
Electrical sidebar:
When we have corroded ground wires, the reference voltage doesn't change, so the current will only be lower due to the high resistance.
A ground can never cause high current draw. (when correct electrically, not talking about it somehow causing a short)
If the ground is loose, or corroded, you could be creating a higher amp load as the voltage drops. If load is constant, as voltage drops, amps increase.
Grounds are behind the load, high resistance to ground will only lower the current draw, because the reference voltage does not change. If there is voltage on a ground wire, it is not grounded, or completely grounded.
Thank you for the epiphany though, the charging system fuse is blowing, which means high current. If we apply the path of least resistance, the only possibility is a shorted rectifier. If this is true, the mpem fuse would not blow because it is in parallel with the 15A charging fuse. That I can test with the dvom and get it out of the way.
Sigh, more testing......
Thanks Steve!