Main Menu

Alternator died... Any low cost upgrades?

Started by FSHTAIL, August 18, 2017, 11:15:49 PM

Previous topic Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

1 Wild R/T

Single biggest change, run a wire from the output stud of the alternator to the battery stud on the starter relay..... If you stick with a 60 amp or smaller alternator a 10 gauge wire is ok.. If you step up to a 120 amp alternator you need at least an 8 gauge wire & personally I'd go 6 gauge...

Second change, disconnect the wires at the Ammeter & bolt them together, insulate the connection....

Third get ahold of Crackedback & buy his Headlight relay kit....

Forth... What ever bigger loads you have should be also be fed by a relay....

Relays take the load off switches & stock wiring....


FSHTAIL

So I ordered a 120amp alternator. 

I'll go 6 gauge on the wiring but I'm thinking of using a manual 150amp marine style inline circuit breaker. 

Does that sound like that would be effective?

Should I breaker the wiring going into the cabin? 

Sent from my SGH-M919 using Tapatalk

1973 BS23H Cuda' 340/TKX 5 speed (70 AAR clone-ish)

FSHTAIL

It's coming right along.   
I still have to pull the dash apart to bypass the Amp gauge. 

Sent from my SM-G930T using Tapatalk

1973 BS23H Cuda' 340/TKX 5 speed (70 AAR clone-ish)


1 Wild R/T

You can do that from under the dash, pull the seat, four nuts from under the car...  To bypass, disconnect the battery, crawl under dash, remove the 3/8" nuts from both ammeter terminals, move the wires both to the same terminal & put the nut back on...

FSHTAIL

Thanks for the tip 1 Wild!

Sent from my SM-G930T using Tapatalk

1973 BS23H Cuda' 340/TKX 5 speed (70 AAR clone-ish)

FSHTAIL

I never thought about just bolting them together off of one stud.      Much easier than trying to dink around with soldering as such.   

Sent from my SM-G930T using Tapatalk

1973 BS23H Cuda' 340/TKX 5 speed (70 AAR clone-ish)

73440

 :iagree:
Quote from: 1 Wild R/T on August 20, 2017, 04:52:10 PM
Single biggest change, run a wire from the output stud of the alternator to the battery stud on the starter relay..... If you stick with a 60 amp or smaller alternator a 10 gauge wire is ok.. If you step up to a 120 amp alternator you need at least an 8 gauge wire & personally I'd go 6 gauge...

Second change, disconnect the wires at the Ammeter & bolt them together, insulate the connection....

Third get ahold of Crackedback & buy his Headlight relay kit....

Forth... What ever bigger loads you have should be also be fed by a relay....



Relays take the load off switches & stock wiring....



all good advice, have the @crackedback headlight relay kit, real nice , just need to install one day.


FSHTAIL

That worked out killer @1 Wild R/T..     
Thanks for that time and back saving tip. 
I was seeing 14.2-14.4 at Idol...   
Flicker is gone.   

Sent from my SM-G930T using Tapatalk

1973 BS23H Cuda' 340/TKX 5 speed (70 AAR clone-ish)

cudaragtop

#23
Overcurrent protection needs to be sized for the ampacity of the wire.
Too small can result in nuisance trips or burned fusible link. Too big can result in Car-B-Que on the side of the road.
6AWG, 8AWG or whatever size wire, the circuit breaker or fusible link is to protect from burning up the wire.
Too large overcurrent protection is the same as none at all.

Wish I had known that as a teen. Had a fuse blow in my parents ElCamino and the radio quit.
My buddy says wrap a piece of foil gum wrapper around the glass fuse and away we go with the radio blasting again.
Moments later smoke and flames are coming out of the dash...
The fuse did it's job. Needed to troubleshoot the short in the wiring not defeat the overcurrent protection.

- Randy D. 1970 'Cuda 340 4-Speed Convertible
69 Barracuda G3 Hemi/8HP70 Resto-Mod Project Album: https://goo.gl/photos/XjsAsx4LDo7psimU8

cudaragtop

We use a lot of this type of wire in our critical facility infrastructure.
http://www.cobrawire.com/x-flex/x-flex.php
Not going to find X-Flex at Lowes, Home Depot or your favorite auto supply store...

#6AWG  NEC Max is 75 Amps for 90*C rated wire
Cobra Wire X-Flex #6 AWG is rated to 118 Amps at 105*C

- Randy D. 1970 'Cuda 340 4-Speed Convertible
69 Barracuda G3 Hemi/8HP70 Resto-Mod Project Album: https://goo.gl/photos/XjsAsx4LDo7psimU8

FSHTAIL

I'm running 4 gauge wire with a 125amp mini anl fuse with a 120amp alternator.   

Sent from my SM-G930T using Tapatalk

1973 BS23H Cuda' 340/TKX 5 speed (70 AAR clone-ish)


cudaragtop

Quote from: Chris Pauluk on September 09, 2017, 01:07:05 PM
I'm running 4 gauge wire with a 125amp mini anl fuse with a 120amp alternator.   

Sent from my SM-G930T using Tapatalk

Your wire will burn before the fuse. Most #4 AWG is only rated for up to 95 Amps.
The alternator isn't capable of putting out enough to burn the fuse but it can put out enough to burn your #4 wire.

- Randy D. 1970 'Cuda 340 4-Speed Convertible
69 Barracuda G3 Hemi/8HP70 Resto-Mod Project Album: https://goo.gl/photos/XjsAsx4LDo7psimU8

FSHTAIL

1973 BS23H Cuda' 340/TKX 5 speed (70 AAR clone-ish)

FSHTAIL

More than adequate for a 12v system.     
Are you confusing AC with DC?

Sent from my SM-G930T using Tapatalk

1973 BS23H Cuda' 340/TKX 5 speed (70 AAR clone-ish)

Skunkworks Challenger

I made those modifications to my wiring and couldn't be more pleased.