We still consider direct wiring the regulator to the battery to be "best practice".
Steve, I can NOT disagree with someone wiring directly to the battery especially if they have one of the older style fuse boxes. However, when you consider the single point power and grounding and all else being equal, I would maintain the "T" as it minimizes current flow between the R/R and battery (on both the + and ground sides). This makes the charging voltage higher if there is corrosion between the R/R and battery. Of course with big leads and clean contacts it will matter little.
It's just that, if you do that, you are changing the fusing requirements. The regulator output will not be changed, but, as pointed out earlier, the fuse between the regulator and the battery does not appear until AFTER some of the regulator's output splits off to power the rest of the bike.
It is my opinion that the only reason there is a 15 amp fuse in there in the first place is because before the bike is running, ALL the current to run the bike (lights, ignition, etc.) will be going through the MAIN fuse.
You are correct that the main fuse has to be sized to run the whole bike. This current is 11 amps when not running and 11 amps peak when the R/R goes into regulation. If it really took 15 amps then the 15 amp fuse would probably blow much more often than it does in practice.
After the bike is running and the stator/regulator are doing their thing, only battery-charging current goes
the other direction through that fuse, and it probably does not need to be as large.
As noted above, even when the bike is running, the battery has to supply the full 11amps when a SHUNT R/R shunts or a SERIES R/R opens.
However, when you wire the regulator directly to the battery, you still need to have a fuse between the battery and the regulator, but ALL the regulator's current is going to be going through that fuse, not just part of it, as before, in the original wiring.
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