gberry50 – Do you have a battery installed yet? If not, you will have trouble getting a voltage reading off the system since it varies constantly. If no battery, you can put a capacitor across the meter leads and that will give you a stable reading of the peak voltage.
The zener diode is to prevent overcharging of the battery. If you have components that don’t like the high peak voltages, it may be useful even without the battery.
Assuming you don’t have a battery and your motor runs poorly when you hook the rectifier up, then reverse the two wires running to your rectifier. That will reverse your polarity and should fix the problem. If you are running LED bulbs, you may have to reverse their polarity also. If you have a battery, you will also have to reverse the battery leads.
I could do a diagram of a full wave setup but there are some other issues with it. The AC alternator output runs through the white wire and black wire. The black wire is grounded. If you hook up a full wave rectifier, you will have to insure that none of your lights, horn, or other electrical components are grounded. You will have to run a separate ground buss that is isolated from the chassis.
From everything that I’ve observed, a full wave charging system is not correct for these motors. The half wave is fairly weak, but it works and does not affect motor performance at all.
Here is another thought. If your only loads are LED bulbs, and you wire them all in the same correct direction, maybe you don’t even need the rectifier diode.