I have been having problems with my battery running down over time. I have discovered that my stereo has some parasitic current so I have implemented a means of disconnecting it when I am away from the boat. I do not have a master battery switch.
My question is about my outboard motor. I have a 2001 9.9hp evinrude, electric start. I notice that with nothing else connected to my battery I am drawing 72 mA from the motor. I have traced it to the single red wire that goes to the regulator assembly. If I disconnect this wire the current drops to zero. I measured the resistance on the red wire with it disconnected. It is 45 Kohm through the regulator to ground and infinite when I measure the other end of the disconnected wire to ground.
This seems like a high parasitic current. Does anyone know if this is normal or what this red wire is for?
Note that the regulator was replaced last year because of battery charging problems.
My question is about my outboard motor. I have a 2001 9.9hp evinrude, electric start. I notice that with nothing else connected to my battery I am drawing 72 mA from the motor. I have traced it to the single red wire that goes to the regulator assembly. If I disconnect this wire the current drops to zero. I measured the resistance on the red wire with it disconnected. It is 45 Kohm through the regulator to ground and infinite when I measure the other end of the disconnected wire to ground.
This seems like a high parasitic current. Does anyone know if this is normal or what this red wire is for?
Note that the regulator was replaced last year because of battery charging problems.