Charging problems

1990_GT

New Member
Jun 29, 2009
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Marysville Wa.
I upgraded to a 3g alternator about a month back. I used a 94-95 GT alternator, 4ga wire from alternator lug to 175 amp mega fuse, then 4ga wire to battery. I also upgraded the battery to fenderwell ground, and engine to firewall ground. Now for the problem, at idle(1000rpm) the alternator puts out around 11 volts, and by the time it gets to the battery its at 3 volts, I know thats not right, and the wire is good and is not grounding out on anything.

When I wired it up I used 4ga wire that came in a amp installe kit(had the wire already) could it be this wire doesnt carry the power like a battery cable would? is my alternator not putting out enough power? I tested in 3 or 4 times and each time it passed. Thanks for the help.
 
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Never, never disconnect an alternator from the battery with the engine running. The resulting voltage spike can damage the car's electronics including the alternator.

Alternator troubleshooting for 86-95 5.0 Mustangs:
Do all of these tests in sequence. Do not skip around. The results of each test depend on the results of the previous tests for correct interpretation.
Changes in wiring for a 3G alternator are in red.


Engine off, ignition off, battery fully charged.
1.) Look for 12 volts at the alternator output. No 12 volts and the dark green fuse link between the orange/black wires and the battery side of the starter solenoid has open circuited.
3G alternator: Look for 12 volts at the stud on the back of the alternator where the 4 gauge power feed wire is bolted.
No voltage and the fuse for the 4 gauge power feed wire is open or there are some loose connections.

2.) Look for 12 volts on the yellow/white wire that is the power feed to the regulator. No 12 volts, and the fuse link for the yellow/white wire has open circuited.

Engine not running, ignition on, battery fully charged.
1.) Alternator warning light should glow. No glow, bulb has burned out or there is a break in the wiring between the regulator plug and the dash. The warning light supplies an exciter voltage that tells the regulator to turn on. There is a 500 ohm resistor in parallel with the warning light so that if the bulb burns out, the regulator still gets the exciter voltage.
Disconnect the D connector with the 3 wires (yellow/white, white/black and green/red) from the voltage regulator. Measure the voltage on the lt green/red wire. It should be 12 volts. No 12 volts and the wire is broken, or the 500 ohm resistor and dash indicator lamp are bad. If the 12 volts is missing, replace the warning lamp. If after replacing the warning lamp, the test fails again, the wiring between the warning lamp and the alternator is faulty. The warning lamp circuit is part of the instrument panel and contains some connectors that may cause problems.

2.) Reconnect the D plug to the alternator
Probe the green/red wire from the rear of the connector and use the battery negative post as a ground. You should see 2.4-2.6 volts. No voltage and the previous tests passed, you have a failed regulator. This is an actual measurement taken from a car with a working electrical system.

Engine running, Ignition on, battery fully charged:
Probe the green/red wire from the rear of the connector and use the battery negative post as a ground. You should see battery voltage minus .25 to 1.0 volt. If the battery voltage measured across the battery is 15.25 volts, you should see 14.50 volts

3.) Familiarize yourself with the following application note from Fluke: See http://assets.fluke.com/appnotes/automotive/beatbook.pdf for help for help troubleshooting voltage drops across connections and components. . You will need to do some voltage drop testing of several of the wires.

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Start looking for these things:
A.) Bad diode(s) in the alternator - one or more diodes have open circuited and are causing the voltage to drop off as load increases. Remove the alternator and bench test it to confirm or deny this as being the problem.
B.) The secondary power ground is between the back of the intake manifold and the driver's side firewall. It is often missing or loose. It supplies ground for the alternator, A/C compressor clutch and other electrical accessories such as the gauges. Do the voltage drop test as shown in the Fluke tech note link. Measure the voltage drop between the alternator frame and the battery negative post. Watch for an increase in drop as the load increases. Use the Fluke voltage drop figures as guidelines for your decisions.
C.) Bad regulator that does not increase field current as load increases. Remove the alternator and bench test it to confirm or deny this as being the problem.
D.) Bad sense wire - open circuit in sense wiring or high resistance. The yellow/white wire is the voltage sense and power for the field. There is a fuse link embedded in the wiring where it connects to the black/orange wiring that can open up and cause problems. Disconnect the battery negative cable from the battery: this will keep you from making sparks when you do the next step. Then disconnect the yellow/white wire at the alternator and the green fuse link at the starter solenoid/starter relay. Measure the resistance between the alternator end of the yellow/white wire and the green fuse link: you should see less than 1 ohm. Reconnect all the wires when you have completed this step.
E.) Bad power feed wiring from the alternator. Use caution in the next step, since you will need to do it with everything powered up and the engine running. You are going to do the Fluke voltage drop tests on the power feed wiring, fuse links and associated parts. Connect one DMM lead to the battery side of the starter solenoid/starter relay. Carefully probe the backside of the black/orange wire connector where it plugs into the alternator. With the engine off, you should see very little voltage. Start the engine and increase the load on the electrical system. Watch for an increase in drop as the load increases. Use the Fluke voltage drop figures as guidelines for your decisions.
 
I already did all that about a month ago, found the problem to be the voltage drop from 11 at the alternator to 3 at the battery, and what I need to know is if its the wire Im using, I noticed the wire itself was very vine, and a battery cable wire is much larger, does this make a difference?
 
Starting over from the beginning to make sure that nothing was missed...

The alternator gets 4 gauge wire from the power out stud on it to the fuse block and from the fuse block to the battery side of the starter solenoid. Use a maximum of 125 amps for the fuse because the fuse is a slow blow type and will carry an overload for quite some time before it blows. A fuse larger than 125 amps will exceed the current carrying capacity of the 4 gauge wire and cause it to overheat and possbly start a fire.

2.) The secondary power ground is between the back of the intake manifold and the driver's side firewall. It is often missing or loose. It supplies ground for the alternator, A/C compressor clutch and other electrical accessories such as the gauges.

Any car that has a 3G or high output current alternator needs a 4 gauge ground wire running from the block to the chassis ground where the battery pigtail ground connects. The 3G has a 130 amp capacity, so you wire the power side with 4 gauge wire. It stands to reason that the ground side handles just a much current, so it needs to be 4 gauge too.

The picture shows the common ground point for the battery & extra 3G alternator ground wire as described above in paragraph 2. A screwdriver points to the bolt that is the common ground point.

The battery common ground is a 10 gauge pigtail with the computer ground attached to it.
Picture courtesy timewarped1972
ground.jpg


Correct negative battery ground cable.
56567d1230679358-positive-negative-battery-cable-questions-86-93-mustang-oem-style-ground-cable.gif


Voltage drop testing of the wiring:
If you have done all this, start by doing the voltage drop testing as shown in step 3 of my first post. Start the car and place a suitable electrical load such as headlights and heater. Begin voltage drop testing with the power out stud on the alternator to the wire lug attached to it. Next, test from the wire lug on the alternator to the stud on the alternator side of the fuse block. Next, test from the alternator side stud of the fuse block to the battery side stud of the fuse block. Then last of all test from the battery side stud of the fuse block to the battery side stud on the starter solenoid.
Any wire or connection that drops more than .2 volts is defective and needs to be cleaned or replaced.