Alternator Wiring

Alternator Wiring

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ultimasimon

Original Poster:

9,641 posts

258 months

Saturday 23rd August 2003
quotequote all
I am upgrading my alternator from 50a/h to 90a/h. The old one was a single wire, self regulating model but I have now switched to a Japanese alternator off of a Supra Turbo, with the higher output. The new model has a seperate three pin connection, and before I nuke it, I just need to confirm my suspitions.

I presume that one wire is the 'idiot' light which goes to the dash as a tell tale. I can easily check that with a meter.

That leaves two more - one I believe is a switched live from the ignition which kicks the alternator in to start charging when it 'sees' +12v on it. Some call it an 'excite' terminal.

So there's one more left - I have no idea what that is for and where it's supposed to go.

Any ideas?

Cheers Simon.

Steve_D

13,747 posts

258 months

Saturday 23rd August 2003
quotequote all
Got 3 sets of info. Don't think any of them will help but I tried.
BMW===Charge light==Starter then the battery==Earth

Range Rover===Charge light==battery==Earth==tacho

Cortina===Charge light (61)==2 terminals join and go to battery.

Sorry
Steve

ultimasimon

Original Poster:

9,641 posts

258 months

Sunday 24th August 2003
quotequote all
Cheers Steve, I just found this:
1. This is the main power wire that goes directly to the battery. Make sure it is a heavy gauge since it has to carry the full output of the alternator (up to 100 amps).
2. This is the field wire that energizes the alternator. It must be switched, or else it will drain the battery overnight. Do not wire this into the coil power wire that you use to switch the engine on and off (a seemingly elegant solution), since once the engine is running, the alternator will power the coil, and your ignition switch will no longer kill the engine.
3. This is the lead for the sensing wire that goes to the idiot light in your instrument panel. A neat tip: if you aren't using a voltmeter or oil pressure gauge, run this wire to a light mounted somewhere on your dash. Often you can't hear your own engine running in the derby, so when this light lights up you know that your engine has just quit (or the alternator has just stopped charging for some reason).
4.This is the regulator bypass hole. Sticking a long thin metal object about 2 inches deep into this D-shaped hole causes the alternator to go to full charge. If you do this while it's dark out and the main power wire is disconnected, the whole alternator will emit a cool X-Files type glow. I don't recommend that you try this since you'll likely end up frying your alternator.

Not so shure about the bypass hole but other than that it looks like a good place to start; thanks for the info.

Steve_D

13,747 posts

258 months

Sunday 24th August 2003
quotequote all
Where did you find the info?
Steve

ultimasimon

Original Poster:

9,641 posts

258 months

Sunday 24th August 2003
quotequote all
Steve_D said:
Where did you find the info?
Steve


Here www.derbypro.com/tut4.html after doing a google search. I know it's not the right alternator but it goes some way as to explaining the wiring.