Your scooter requires a source of electricity to power the lights,
horn, electric start motor, and other accessories. It gets this
electicity by generating it from the flywheel spinning around the coils
on the stator acting as giant electromagnet. The power that comes off
the stator is AC power, and it's output voltage varies depending on how
fast your engine is revving. You may have noticed this fluctuation on a
non-battery bike - your lights + horn get stronger as your engine RPMs
are higher.
The problem is that at higher RPMs there can be too much electricity
for the bulbs on the circuit, and they will burn out. Some models of
Vespas solved this by adding to the circuit a device called a
'Regulator'. This acts like a flood gate - if you have a 6 Volt
regulator it allows up to 6 volts to pass through the circuit
unrestricted. If the voltage ever gets OVER 6 Volt the gate kicks in
and stops the excess by dumping it to ground.
Regulators are fine if all the electrics on your bike are AC. If your
bike utilizes a battery or has any DC components like horn,
tail/brakelight, turnsignals or a radio then you're going to need to
have a rectifier in the system.
What's a rectifier? It's an electronic circuit that takes an AC input
and converts it, or 'rectifies it' to a positive DC output voltage. You
probably are using 'AC Adapters' in your house right now - on your
laptop computer, or on your cordless or cell phone charger. All these
devices involve a rectifier circuit - they take AC current from the
wall and turn it into DC current to charge DC batteries inside the
devices.
Rectifiers in scooters do the same thing - they take AC input from the
stator, and output a DC voltage to charge the battery when the engine
is running and operate the rest of your DC accessories. The rectifier
also includes a regulator component as well, to offer outputs of both
regulated DC and AC. Rectifiers also come in 6v or 12v versions.
Thanks to Eric Mazurak for writing
all this out. It would have taken me ages to get it together.