According to my experience and my shop manual, your voltage is just fine. It should be about 12 V at idle and be discharging the battery. It climbs to a maximum of about 17 V at 3500 rpm and supplies about 1.5 to 2 A to the battery. Both lights on and lights off states have similar characteristics because the output from the alternator is doubled when the lights are turned on.OldStan wrote:I've noted before on my restore threads that both my CA77 and CL77 run high voltage. At road speed any where from 16.8 to 17.1 volts, depending on the meter used (not expensive ones obviously.)
Diane,
I agree with your comments. I made a replacement bridge rectifier from four top hat Si diodes, some aluminium plates and the hardware from my disassembled Se rectifier many years ago because of charging issues. It doesn't change the voltage curve much but the peak charging current is increased by ~0.5 A and the new rectifier runs cooler than the old one, presumably because of the decreased forward resistance. This setup is sufficient and I have never found a need to add a regulator although any added electric accessories such as the electronic ignition described on this site might well tax the system.