i will try that when i fire it up today. i know i will need to rebuild alt 1 im just wondering if what im experiencing is normal for gen 2
Think if your batteries as flashlight batteries. They are "stacked" on top of each other, electrically, like a flashlight sitting upright on its tail. The + of the front battery goes to the - of the rear battery, just like in a flashlight, the nose (+) of the bottom battery sits against the tail (-) of the upper battery, and their voltages ADD together.
The two alternators are connected to the two batteries; + of alt to + of battery, - of alt to - of battery, in each case. The ONLY difference is, one of those alts makes its - connection through the chassis (what we usually call GROUND), and one of them makes its - connection through some wires that do NOT touch ground.
What gets people all wound up is the question of
GROUND. People have the idea that GROUND is some magical, mystical
absolute point. It's not. If we never electrically connected ANYTHING in a vehicle to the chassis, nobody would be confused by this system. We'd have two wires running to every light, gauge, blower motor, anything electrical, and the circuits would be easy to trace. The + and the - of each ALT would be wired to the + and the - of each battery, and everything would make sense to everybody.
We'd also spend a lot more money on wire in a vehicle, and we'd have more crowded wire looms. Which is why we borrow the convenient electrically conductive body of the vehicle to run the other side of the circuit, and we call that "GROUND", and everybody gets confused.