Diverting back on topic . . . I have mapped the power wires (as best I could) from the overly busy wiring diagram.
Not sure it will upload properly, but here it is . . . I took some liberties with the color designation, since my graphic software doesn't know about wire stripes.
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View attachment 399087
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I believe that I found an error in the diagram reference in the area of the coil packs, so I'm not sure if the #45 item is the 'Throttle Demand' or not. The manual has one of the coil packs referenced as the throttle demand . . .
Anyway, I'll be going through this over the next few days, but I did want to post it for those that may see something. I assume the the VesselView and OBD-M (Diacom) readouts are coming from the connections at PCM-A and PCM-C . . . not sure which one(s) relate to 'system voltage' and 'battery voltage' on the Diacom screen.
Looking at this. I believe #45 is port exhaust temp, #46 is lube bottle, #47 is DLC, #48 is O2 heaters. But I can't be sure, so ----
Can you post or PM me the compete original diagrams? I don't have access to your engine wiring diagrams.
I saw a picture of a circuit breaker for clean power that looked pretty bad. Clean power is critical for these systems. Both the positive and negative clean power need a voltage drop free connection to the engine battery for the engine that PCM is mounted to. We had boat come back to the dealership that had been winterized, stored and summerized by by another shop it had all sorts of weird issue, many fault codes, no steering on port and couldn't shut if off unless you turned both keys off at exactly the same time. problem ended up being that when the boat was summerized the other shop had switched the clean power grounds. Had port clean power connected to starboard battery and stbd clean power connected to port batt. That was all that was wrong, once we swapped them every problem went away -- now this was a Volvo powered boat but Volvo and Merc are pretty close in how this stuff works. Clean power is named that because perfectly clean power is needed.
I saw mentioned that it's possible one of your warning horns is connected to house battery power? If so this must be corrected. Each engine (and when I say engine I mean engine all the way to the dash -- gauges, throttles, command module, thrust vector module. basically anything MerCruiser) must only receive power from that engine's battery. ONLY.
MY best guess is you have a clean power issue or an interconnect --- MerCruiser powering something it shouldn't or being powered by something it shouldn't. And when I power, I mean power and ground, both are important.
If this boat was brought to me. First thing I would grab is cutters and a big bundle of tie wraps, a roll of electrical tape and a big pack of alcohol wipes to clean the black sticky from my hands. Unfortunately I think this boat might have come from the factory miss wired or something got changed during rigging/additions. And these problems are starting to show up more and more as age and voltage drop increase.
If you have the Cruisers wiring diagram for the helm, it would be nice to look at.
One other thing I noticed. It looks like Cruisers is using a battery isolator so the engines can charge the house batteries. I seem to remember some talk about isolators needing to be approved by Mercury in DTS applications. Something about too much voltage drop across the isolators. But I didn't pay to much attention because all our boats had transitioned to VSRs by then. Maybe someone else remembers something about this?