re comment [#1] I assume this is the electrical load and does not include the battery or headlamps.
I have measured the various load circuits from an OEM fuse box and
O/W (IGNITION) with ignitor and Accel coils at 2.5 amps average
O/R (HEADLAMP) and the H-4 headlamp at 5 amps unless you are shutting it off.
O/G (SIGNAL) is also 5 amps depending upon brakes and signals. That can be taken down to less than 1 amp with LED's
You still have about 3 amps going into a 14 ampHr Lead-acid battery to keep it at 14.5V.
re comment [#2]
It is interesting that you can deliver 14-17 amps to the electrical load. Depending on your battery voltage thee is probably something left over to charge the battery. I have never done tests for maximum current draw from the R/R while maintaining full charging voltage (i.e. 14.5V).
You seem to be setup with that with enough loads to tax the system.
In the Compufire v.s. MOSFET testing I did where I measured the stator currents. I came up with a saturated current limit under the shunting condition of about
27 amps maximum(I checked the chart). The Series Compufire does not short the stator so it peaked out at the load current of 15 amps presumably well below the maximum current the stator can provide.
It would be interesting to know with the setup you have now, what the total current is going to both the battery and the electrical load when your charging system just begins to drop voltage (say down to 14.25V rather than 14.5V) because of too much draw.
You would have to measure the voltage at the output of the R/R and not at the Battery for the tests to be valid.
It would be interesting if you could get as high as the short circuit stator current in current delivered to the load. I guess I could do the same test but would need to get a similar configuration to uses with enough variable loads to start to drag the charging voltage down. Not going to happen soon.
Other than this I only have some empirical evidence there is more headroom than the 15 amp demand from people that have reported adding additional accessories without issue. A set of heated grips and vest might add another 5 amps for example making the total 20 amps, but in the back of my mind I have 18 amps noted. If you add the accessories and it pulls the R/R voltage down they you have exceeded the current capacity. So monitoring the voltage while adding the loads is necessary to claim the excess capacity of the system.