Rectifier will only change the signal from the stator from AC to DC, then it gets regulated to 12 +/- volts. A fully charged battery, with no-load, should read approximately 13.2v after the initial charge has settled. Above idle, your charging system shouldn't exceed 14.5-ish volts on a regulated system. On a system that does not have a regulator, the battery and electrical load (demand) of the boat should keep the charging system in check. That is the way many smaller systems are designed.......they need to have a load on the system. If you fully charge your battery prior to heading out, there isn't a load on the system, so an over-charge state occurs. Unless you want to convert to a regulated system (not difficult, nor expensive), you will need to induce a load on the charging system whenever you go out. I've found that keeping the lights on creates enough of a load on the system to mainain 14-ish volts almost all the time when cruising. Watersports and multiple restarts creates enough of a drain on the battery to properly load the charging system, too. I don't like to see north of 15v on my charging system. I had a bad regulator on my old car in high school and had a battery explode due to over-charging. Lesson learned.