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Thread: Battery or Alternator bad?
          
   
   

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  1. #16
    ted dehaan's Avatar
    ted dehaan is offline CHR Member Visit my Photo Gallery
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    Car Year, Make, Model: 32ford5w,60fordstarliner,55chevy65corvai
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    one more thing to check run a jumper wire from the alt case to ground the alt has to br grounded I had a couple of times diy ers came to my shop after puting in new motors thr paint was so thick it would not ground that will make you scrach your head a few times ted

  2. #17
    bucs012 is offline CHR Member Visit my Photo Gallery
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    Guys, great info and I have plenty to do this weekend because of it!

    Took my alternator to AutoZone after work last night and it tested GOOD too. Got another guy that was interested in Hot Rods.........Like finding gold. Right!? It past the test, however, he did tell me that since it's off the car it only tests to see if it's putting our amps. NOT how many..........He said I should put the car back together and bring it down and he'll wheel out the cart that will tell us exactly how many amps it's putting out. He works all day Saturday so we will test it at idle, then at 2,000 rpm and the car HOT. See what we get there and then turn lights radio and electric fan on etc!

    My luck is bad! Bought a nice new digital volt meter there last night for $36. Took it home and put it on my battery, set at 20 volts setting on the dial. BOTH the ground and positive wires hot super hot and almost melted! Would give no reading at all just stayed at 0.00. Used my old dial voltmeter (non digital) and worked just fine. Did my car battery and truck battery. Same result on both.
    32 Ford
    Des Moines, Iowa
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  3. #18
    willowbilly3 is offline CHR Member Visit my Photo Gallery
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    Quote Originally Posted by bucs012
    How do I check the alternator? At the battery like mentioned above? or can I put my voltmeter direct to the alternator some how?
    Basically if the volts are right you don't have to worry about amps or anything else. Test at the battery. Volts at rest on battery as mentioned, 12.6-12.8. Start the car and with everything turned on that uses electricity, you want to see 1 volt more than battery voltage with the engine off.
    I know a lot of people love those one wire delcos but I would wire in a regulator to run an old style Ford alternator personally.

  4. #19
    skids72's Avatar
    skids72 is offline CHR Member Visit my Photo Gallery
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    I would suspect a bad starter... could have dirty brushes or contacts and a weak one gets weaker with heat. Sounds like your battery and alternator are both okay. I've had similar troubles before that turned out to be a loose (not tight) ground connection to the battery... as was mentioned before, check your ground... from battery to frame and battery to engine block...

    on your new voltmeter, if you had the settings or the leads setup to read current (Amps) you would have a short and burn your leads measuring across the battery posts...

    goode luck,

    -Chris

  5. #20
    bucs012 is offline CHR Member Visit my Photo Gallery
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    I must ask. Were you guys foolin with me???? With my car off, some of you told me to keep my battery ground cable on battery. Unhook my positive cable from the post. Run one end of my 6 or 12 volt circuit test light to the battery + post then the other end of the circuit test light to the + battery cable. If the light lights up it meant I have a current draw from my car, draining my battery......And I need to find it by pulling fuses till it goes out. Well, the light lit up when I did this. Isn't this the same thing as having the cable hooked to the post thus of course it's getting power?

    I tried this same test on my 63 Nova, my 2005 ram truck and my wifes 07 Pacifica. All 3 times the light lit up when I do the test.

    My battery tested at 12.6 volts this morning and again tonight when I got home from work still outside the car NOT hooked up to anything. I put the car back together. Started the car up and running at idle of 1,000 or 2,000 rpm's I get 14.5 to 14.65 volts at the battery even when my electric fan kicks on. All sounds good. Right?

    Went for a nice drive with fan running through a few cycles of on/off. Got home and turned car off to check the battery again and now it is higher voltage at 12.84. Great, right?

    So tonight I am leaving it all hooked up and seeing what my voltage reading is in the morning after having set hooked up in the car for 12 hours.
    Last edited by bucs012; 08-15-2008 at 08:12 PM.
    32 Ford
    Des Moines, Iowa
    Website- http://s104.photobucket.com/albums/m...012/32%20Ford/

  6. #21
    Sniper is offline CHR Member/Contributor Visit my Photo Gallery
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    Nope, I'm not goonin ya! Ok, the test light your using, is it an incandescent bulb? ( Can't use an LED type for this type of test. )Did you have the door open at the time of the test? That would cause a draw, because the interior light would be on. How about the hood, have a light that comes on when it's open, or the trunk lid, same thing would happen. Everything has to be off, that would normally be off, including the key switch. Any of these would cause a closed circuit and make your test light come on. The one thing that may be getting you, is the plug on the alt that plugs into the regulator. Unplug it, to eliminate it, while you do your test. If everything is off, and pulling the fuses won't make the light go out, you have one of three things happening. 1. The circuit that is involved isn't fused, or 2. you have a short on the positive side somewhere, ( pinched or wire rubbed bare ) or 3. an item isn't being shut off with the key switch. ( Electric fuel pump? Stuck brake light switch? Glove box light? Radio-tape-CD player? ) With the test light hooked up inline ( in series ) on the positive cable, any, and all power flow will have to go through it. It will only light up if there is flow. Just have to keep hunting, feel and smell for anything getting hot. Now isn't being a mechanic fun. I've been doing this stuff for a lot of years, and most times these things are simple and stupid. Well, they are once you find them. Sniper
    Last edited by Sniper; 08-16-2008 at 11:43 PM.

  7. #22
    willowbilly3 is offline CHR Member Visit my Photo Gallery
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    Quote Originally Posted by Sniper
    Nope, I'm not goonin ya! Ok, the test light your using, is it an incandescent bulb? ( Can't use an LED type for this type of test. )Did you have the door open at the time of the test? That would cause a draw, because the interior light would be on. How about the hood, have a light that comes on when it's open, or the trunk lid, same thing would happen. Everything has to be off, that would normally be off, including the key switch. Any of these would cause a closed circuit and make your test light come on. The one thing that may be getting you, is the plug on the alt that plugs into the regulator. Unplug it, to eliminate it, while you do your test. If everything is off, and pulling the fuses won't make the light go out, you have one of three things happening. 1. The circuit that is involved isn't fused, or 2. you have a short on the positive side somewhere, ( pinched or wire rubbed bare ) or 3. an item isn't being shut off with the key switch. ( Electric fuel pump? Stuck brake light switch? Glove box light? Radio-tape-CD player? ) With the test light hooked up inline ( in series ) on the positive cable, any, and all power flow will have to go through it. It will only light up if there is flow. Just have to keep hunting, feel and smell for anything getting hot. Now isn't being a mechanic fun. I've been doing this stuff for a lot of years, and most times these things are simple and stupid. Well, they are once you find them. Sniper
    I have seen some cars with keep alive circuits that fade to a very small draw (clock for instance) when the battery is actually connected but will still light up the test light. Some stereos will do that too.
    Very often I find the draw on a GM to be inside the alternator, shorted internal regulator I suppose. They can even still charge ok and do that.

  8. #23
    Sniper is offline CHR Member/Contributor Visit my Photo Gallery
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    Quote Originally Posted by willowbilly3
    I have seen some cars with keep alive circuits that fade to a very small draw (clock for instance) when the battery is actually connected but will still light up the test light. Some stereos will do that too.
    Very often I find the draw on a GM to be inside the alternator, shorted internal regulator I suppose. They can even still charge ok and do that.
    Hi Willowbilly, Yup your right, an alt can show a draw for a couple of reasons, and if it does, it would or should, be very small. At least not large enough to kill a battery under normal use. But that is why I mentioned unplugging it so it wouldn't interfer with the test. Also, if a meter is used along with the test light, you can determine just how heavy the draw is. The one draw that gets a lot of people is when a diode on the trio goes bad. If you have an indicator light instead of a gauge in the dash you might catch it. It will glow real dim, so dim in fact that you can't see it in day light, but it will show if it's dark out. That one, can and will drain a battery, if a car sits for a few days. But the darn thing will allow the alt to appear to charge in a normal manner. As long as you drive it enough, you cover up the problem. Until it's parked at the airport for a week or two, or stored for a bit, and then it's, "hey, what happened, it was ok when I left it here?" This stuff pretty well has to be eliminated step by step, if you hop scotch around the system your more likely to miss it, if you do find it this way, it was likely pure luck. Not that there's anything wrong with being lucky, it just doesn't happen often enough. Sniper

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