So I did some highway driving today and was enjoying it until my alternator light started coming on. Looked at my gauge and it was at 12v, so I gave it some more gas and then it jumped to 15-16v and it hangs there until I'm idling again, then it drops again. I don't know what's changed but I can definitely tell that it's making the car run rough. In the month or so I've had the car it's always been hanging out above 14v which I know is not ideal. I don't know much about the inner workings of an alternator but if there's a voltage regulator in there or something like that maybe that's not working properly? I'd be more than willing to swap out the alternator for a new one if need be. I guess I'll have to check the battery as well since it may have been getting overcharged. Any ideas on what's going on would be very much appreciated. Thanks
intern voltage regulator gone bad you can repair it yourself or replace the alternator did the car still start after you shut it off at home? don't worry too much about the battery, check the voltage with a real volt meter with the engine running somewhere between 13.8 to 14.3 v is what you want when charging
Sounds good. Voltage regulator sounds like the better option. I haven't checked if it starts but I would assume it would, it was overcharging for 90% of the time. Thanks for the reply!
Actually, that's exactly where it should be. It takes a minimum of 13.8 volts to charge the battery. My voltmeter stays at a little over 14 volts at all times.
Mine often goes above 16v, just today I watched it go from 14v - 16v when the turn signal was on. Plus it'll drop to just over 12v with no other load when idling sometimes until I give it a kick and it goes back above 14.
I got a voltage regulator from the parts store, currently in the process of taking the alternator out. I'm stuck on taking off the rear connector, would you happen to know a trick on how to get it off? I can get a wrench on the nut but I need to hold the back one in place and I can't get anything on it. https://imgur.com/qsYnbVK
That's strange, it should not turn. That nut should come right off. That might be a problem right there. Just looked at a youtube video. That battery out put stud fits into a square opening so it doesn't turn. Yours must be stripped.
Damn, I figured it was going too well anyways lol. It's a real pain especially since the wire is just twisting itself to death at the same time. I'm considering running to crappy tire and seeing if they have a real thin wrench that might fit over that back part, but I guess last resort would be cutting the connector and putting a new one on. I'd really rather not do that.
Thanks for the help Larry I hope that's not the case. Might have to pull it apart carefully while its still attached. Lucky me
I can't open the pic, but there were 2 alternators for that. A 10SI 63 amp and a 27SI 80 amp. If you have the 80 amp alt the strap from the post to the rectifier is probably burnt. You may want to buy another alt as the strap is hard to find. Or you could make your own strap. Cutting the wire may be the best option. Briz, you may have a blown fuse.
The insulator fits in a square hole and it will need replaced. Usually you can hold the wire with a pair of pliers to loosen it. Saturn made a tool for their mechanics to hold the square part of the post. If you know an ex saturn mechanic he probably has one. It is just a flat piece of metal with a square opening cut on the end.
So I got the alternator out at the cost of a broken connector end. Will have to replace that, but yeah that insulator is garbage. I can’t find it on rock auto and Napa has nothing either. I’m gonna call an alternator shop and see if they’ve got anything.
Everything is back together now and working perfectly. That voltage needle doesn't even budge unless under load, as it should be. Thanks everyone for the help!!