55V Circuit Above Range (Code 18)
Fault Code 18 is the mirror image of Code 17 — instead of the 55V rail being too low, the EMM has detected system voltage exceeding 57V. An unregulated or over-charging stator can destroy the capacitor and ultimately burn out injector driver circuitry inside the EMM. Like Code 17, the engine activates LED 1, CHECK ENGINE, and restricts speed to 1,200 RPM. This fault must be diagnosed promptly to prevent cascading damage to expensive components.
Hardware Care repairs this fault, fixed price, 24-month warrantyWhat you're seeing
- LED 1 illuminated on the EMM at startup or under load
- CHECK ENGINE warning active
- Engine speed limited to 1,200 RPM
- Warning alarm sounds for approximately 1 minute
- Fault Code 18 stored in the EMM fault log
- Possible burning smell or capacitor swelling in severe cases
Why this happens
- Failed 55V voltage regulator inside the EMM (most common)
- Degraded or failing capacitor causing voltage spikes
- Stator producing excessive voltage due to shorted turns increasing output
- Poor engine ground connection causing voltage reference errors
- Intermittent fault before capacitor fails completely (codes 17 and 18 alternating)
Affected engines
Affects all Evinrude E-TEC engines using the stator-driven 55V system. Over-voltage faults are less common than under-voltage but more damaging when left unaddressed. A failed 55V regulator inside the EMM is the most frequent cause. In some cases a failing capacitor (losing its ability to buffer the rail) causes temporary voltage spikes that trigger Code 18 intermittently before the capacitor fails completely.
How to diagnose step by step
Step 1 — Inspect the flywheel magnets**
As with Code 17, start at the flywheel. Remove the cover and inspect for corrosion or damage. While flywheel issues more commonly cause low voltage (Code 17), physical damage to magnets can create irregular output that causes transient over-voltage spikes.
Step 2 — Test the capacitor**
A capacitor that is losing capacitance can no longer smooth the 55V rail, allowing voltage spikes to trigger Code 18 intermittently. Discharge the capacitor fully before testing.
Discharging:* Momentarily connect a jumper wire between both capacitor terminals and a clean engine ground. Keep contact brief — a small spark is normal.
Testing (ohmmeter on HIGH ohms scale):*
- **Good capacitor:** Resistance starts low, then rises steadily toward nearly infinity. - **Shorted capacitor:** Immediate full continuity — replace immediately. A shorted cap cannot buffer voltage at all. - **Open-circuit capacitor:** No reading (OL) from the first moment — the capacitor offers no buffering and rail voltage will spike. - **Note:** If the initial reading appears negative (analog meter deflects backward) or resistance decreases rather than increasing, the capacitor still holds stored charge. Discharge again and retest.
Step 3 — Measure live 55V rail voltage**
With a multimeter on DC volts, probe the 55V supply terminal at the EMM connector while the engine runs at 1,500–2,000 RPM (or as close to that as the limp mode allows). Voltage should read 52–57V DC. A reading consistently above 57V confirms an over-voltage condition. Compare with AC stator output (Step 4) to determine whether the regulator inside the EMM is to blame.
Step 4 — Test the stator output (dynamic test)**
With the stator disconnected from the EMM, probe stator output with a multimeter on AC volts while cranking: - At 500–1,000 RPM: expect approximately 40–50V AC - Above 1,000 RPM: expect approximately 50–65V AC (raw AC before regulation) Excessively high raw AC output (over 70V at moderate RPM) suggests the stator has shorted turns that are increasing its effective output. Verify with the resistance test — shorted turns show as lower-than-specified resistance.
Step 5 — Check engine ground connections**
A poor battery negative or engine block ground causes the EMM's voltage reference to float, producing false high-voltage readings and triggering Code 18 without a real over-voltage condition. Clean and torque all ground connections to the battery negative and engine block.
Step 6 — EMM regulator failure**
If the capacitor, stator, and grounds all test good but the 55V rail is still over 57V, the internal 55V voltage regulator inside the EMM has failed open. This is the most common root cause of Code 18. Ship the EMM to Hardware Care for repair — fixed price, 24-month warranty.
This fault is repairable.
Fixed price. 24-month warranty.
Code 18 left unrepaired will damage your capacitor and injectors. We repair the EMM regulator at a fixed price — before the damage spreads.
Repair pricing
E-TEC 40–90 HP
excl. VAT
€532
E-TEC 115–300 HP
excl. VAT
€596
Ficht EMM
excl. VAT
€596
How it works
From your front door to ours and back, simple, worldwide.
Step 01 / 05
Submit your EMM
Fill in our quick online form with your engine model, serial number, and symptoms. We review everything before your unit arrives.
Step 02 / 05
Ship to us, stress-free
Inside the EU? You're free to ship it yourself with any local courier. Outside the EU? It's always DHL Express. We arrange door-to-door pickup and handle all the customs paperwork for you.
Step 03 / 05
Sit back while we repair it
We diagnose and repair your EMM with professional equipment. Email updates at every stage. Can't fix it? You pay nothing.
Step 04 / 05
Approve & pay securely
Once your EMM is repaired and tested, you only pay when you're satisfied, via PayPal, credit card, or bank transfer.
Step 05 / 05
We ship it back
Your repaired EMM is packed securely and sent back via DHL Express with full tracking.
Step 01 / 05
Submit your EMM
Fill in our quick online form with your engine model, serial number, and symptoms. We review everything before your unit arrives.
Step 02 / 05
Ship to us, stress-free
Inside the EU? You're free to ship it yourself with any local courier. Outside the EU? It's always DHL Express. We arrange door-to-door pickup and handle all the customs paperwork for you.
Step 03 / 05
Sit back while we repair it
We diagnose and repair your EMM with professional equipment. Email updates at every stage. Can't fix it? You pay nothing.
Step 04 / 05
Approve & pay securely
Once your EMM is repaired and tested, you only pay when you're satisfied, via PayPal, credit card, or bank transfer.
Step 05 / 05
We ship it back
Your repaired EMM is packed securely and sent back via DHL Express with full tracking.
Why Hardware Care?
Trusted by the Evinrude community, with over 1000+ repairs.
EMMs Repaired
Successfully diagnosed & fixed
Years of Experience
Specialist in Evinrude EMMs
2 Years Warranty
Every repair has a full 24-month warranty. No worries about it breaking down again.
Learn moreWorldwide Service
We collect your unit via DHL Express from anywhere in the world and return it repaired.
Learn moreNo Cure, No Pay
If we can't fix your EMM we charge nothing, and we'll help find an alternative solution.
Learn moreWhat customers say
★★★★★