I've owned my deuce for about a month and haven't had a problem one starting it.
I had an electrical issue yesterday and a hot wire underneath the dash shorted out against the dash panel. When it did that, the whole electrical system shut down. No lights, no fuel pump, no warning buzzer, no gauges, naha. I fixed the wire that was poorly insulated and continued on my search.
There are three wires coming off my pretolite alternator. The small gauge wire that feeds the entire electrical system wasn't "hot". I spliced it into the positive (larger) wire coming off the alternator, and eureka, I've got power again.....
However....
I went out to start the deuce this morning and the batteries had lost enough charge to where it wouldn't crank the engine full revolutions to start.
So, I proceded to remove the batteries and take them to the shop to put on the charger. I noticed when I unhooked one of the positive terminals, a small spark occured, signifying that there was SOMETHING still on. There shouldn't be anything in the truck causing a spark of that magnitude, unless something was blatantly left on.
I checked all the lights, main IGN switch was off. Nothing at all turned "on" in the truck.
I suspect alternator diodes burnt out from my "short circuit" experience?
I removed the alternator entirely to take to the service shop for inspection, placed the batteries on the charger and proceded to my Easter wild rompus.
Before I left, I wired the "main electrical system" wire (small wire at alternator) into the larger power wire at the alternator so i could get the thing started and moved once I got the batteries charged.
When I went to hook up the batteries again after the charging process......No spark occured whatsoever at the teminals.
I suspected the positive diodes to be burnt causing an electrical drain on the positive side, since that was what i shorted out.
Since the only thing I removed from the eletrical circuit was the alternator, and now I don't recieve a spark when I hook up the batteries,
Am I on the right track?
I want to put it back to the way it was. It was charging fine and never failed to show the least resistance in cranking even for sitting 5 days.
The alternator is off and in the back of my pickup. I'm wiring in a 30 amp fuse at the "main" power wire coming off the alternator just to prevent any more issues with short circuits.
I had an electrical issue yesterday and a hot wire underneath the dash shorted out against the dash panel. When it did that, the whole electrical system shut down. No lights, no fuel pump, no warning buzzer, no gauges, naha. I fixed the wire that was poorly insulated and continued on my search.
There are three wires coming off my pretolite alternator. The small gauge wire that feeds the entire electrical system wasn't "hot". I spliced it into the positive (larger) wire coming off the alternator, and eureka, I've got power again.....
However....
I went out to start the deuce this morning and the batteries had lost enough charge to where it wouldn't crank the engine full revolutions to start.
So, I proceded to remove the batteries and take them to the shop to put on the charger. I noticed when I unhooked one of the positive terminals, a small spark occured, signifying that there was SOMETHING still on. There shouldn't be anything in the truck causing a spark of that magnitude, unless something was blatantly left on.
I checked all the lights, main IGN switch was off. Nothing at all turned "on" in the truck.
I suspect alternator diodes burnt out from my "short circuit" experience?
I removed the alternator entirely to take to the service shop for inspection, placed the batteries on the charger and proceded to my Easter wild rompus.
Before I left, I wired the "main electrical system" wire (small wire at alternator) into the larger power wire at the alternator so i could get the thing started and moved once I got the batteries charged.
When I went to hook up the batteries again after the charging process......No spark occured whatsoever at the teminals.
I suspected the positive diodes to be burnt causing an electrical drain on the positive side, since that was what i shorted out.
Since the only thing I removed from the eletrical circuit was the alternator, and now I don't recieve a spark when I hook up the batteries,
Am I on the right track?
I want to put it back to the way it was. It was charging fine and never failed to show the least resistance in cranking even for sitting 5 days.
The alternator is off and in the back of my pickup. I'm wiring in a 30 amp fuse at the "main" power wire coming off the alternator just to prevent any more issues with short circuits.