Nasty Wendy Isn't
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Larry, if you put your meter on volts, touch one probe to the negative terminal of the battery (preferably not the cable terminal itself) and the other end to the engine block, and the meter reads 0.2v, then you know you have a two tenths drop within the cable or its terminals/connections.If you put a probe on the alternator housing and one on the battery negative post and you get a 0.3v reading, you know you have lost three tenths of a volt somewhere between the alternator case and the negative post of the battery.If you put a probe on the power terminal of the alternator and the other on the battery plus post, and it reads 0.1v, then you know you lost a tenth in that circuit. Add the two together and you have a 0.4v loss in the alternator circuit between it and the battery.Then you get to figure out where the loss was. Alternator case connection to the bracket, ground cable, whatever....Pu t one probe on the case and one on the bracket, then engine, etc.It is normal to have a little loss, but, a couple of tenths here, couple there, and pretty soon you are shorting yourself the voltage you need