IsaLandr
Tartaned Goði
- 186
- 18
- 18
- Location
- Centralia, WA
Taking Biff, our M923, out to the fueling station for a top-up, and the alternator stopped charging. I didn't see, hear, or smell anything, but it stopped charging. My best guess is that the Magic Smoke has escaped.
It was behaving somewhat erratically prior to this trip, to be honest. The needle on the gauge dropped into the mid-yellow for a few seconds, and then popped back into the green where it belongs. Did that three or four times yesterday, but then stayed in the green and was charging normally after that. I put my multimeter on it, and it was showing correct voltage.
Today on the trip to the fueling station, about 8 miles each way, the needle dropped into the yellow again for a few seconds twice along the way. Then, as I was pulling into the station, it dropped into the yellow and stayed there. I shut the truck down, fueled up, restarted, and... same. That's where it stayed for the whole trip back to the farm.
I put my multimeter on it when I got it back, and it's showing slightly low battery voltage at the slave port, and at the batteries themselves. The alternator appears to be putting out no voltage at all. It had been showing slightly low a year ago (25vdc), and using the search function here, I found the information to adjust the regulator up to 28.6vdc, where it's happily stayed from then to now.
I've got two of the four batteries currently on chargers, and will switch them to the other two when those batteries are done. Reading the various posts and searching a bit, it seems that trying to top up already low batteries puts too much strain on the alternator, which pops the regulator. That's probably what happened to mine, the batteries were a bit low. So that's the assumption I'm running on at the moment, although I'm also suspicious of the brushes. Please feel free to correct me if my reasoning is faulty.
I'll also add that this morning, when I first started it, the needle on the gauge was in the high yellow, and would only creep up into the green as I increased engine RPM. At idle, it would stay in the high yellow. Cruising down the road, it was where it's supposed to be in the green, but anytime the RPMs dropped, so would the needle. My guess is that this is indicating the regulator was on its way out? Maybe? Or maybe the brushes were not functioning properly?
Please don't tell me to RTFM, or to use the search function on this site. I've done both of those. What I'd like to get are suggestions or recommendations, preferences, for getting this fixed. Pros and cons for different methods, rather than telling me to go research it myself. I've done that, and there are conflicting opinions. Replace the whole alternator with a Delco civilian unit. Get the regulator rebuilt. Put on a new regulator. Replace the stock unit with another OEM unit. Have the whole alternator rebuilt. And so forth. I'm not sure what I want to do on this yet, so I'm looking for persuasive arguments in favour of one or another method.
Thoughts, suggestions, recommendations?
It was behaving somewhat erratically prior to this trip, to be honest. The needle on the gauge dropped into the mid-yellow for a few seconds, and then popped back into the green where it belongs. Did that three or four times yesterday, but then stayed in the green and was charging normally after that. I put my multimeter on it, and it was showing correct voltage.
Today on the trip to the fueling station, about 8 miles each way, the needle dropped into the yellow again for a few seconds twice along the way. Then, as I was pulling into the station, it dropped into the yellow and stayed there. I shut the truck down, fueled up, restarted, and... same. That's where it stayed for the whole trip back to the farm.
I put my multimeter on it when I got it back, and it's showing slightly low battery voltage at the slave port, and at the batteries themselves. The alternator appears to be putting out no voltage at all. It had been showing slightly low a year ago (25vdc), and using the search function here, I found the information to adjust the regulator up to 28.6vdc, where it's happily stayed from then to now.
I've got two of the four batteries currently on chargers, and will switch them to the other two when those batteries are done. Reading the various posts and searching a bit, it seems that trying to top up already low batteries puts too much strain on the alternator, which pops the regulator. That's probably what happened to mine, the batteries were a bit low. So that's the assumption I'm running on at the moment, although I'm also suspicious of the brushes. Please feel free to correct me if my reasoning is faulty.
I'll also add that this morning, when I first started it, the needle on the gauge was in the high yellow, and would only creep up into the green as I increased engine RPM. At idle, it would stay in the high yellow. Cruising down the road, it was where it's supposed to be in the green, but anytime the RPMs dropped, so would the needle. My guess is that this is indicating the regulator was on its way out? Maybe? Or maybe the brushes were not functioning properly?
Please don't tell me to RTFM, or to use the search function on this site. I've done both of those. What I'd like to get are suggestions or recommendations, preferences, for getting this fixed. Pros and cons for different methods, rather than telling me to go research it myself. I've done that, and there are conflicting opinions. Replace the whole alternator with a Delco civilian unit. Get the regulator rebuilt. Put on a new regulator. Replace the stock unit with another OEM unit. Have the whole alternator rebuilt. And so forth. I'm not sure what I want to do on this yet, so I'm looking for persuasive arguments in favour of one or another method.
Thoughts, suggestions, recommendations?