After I did my ATX/MTX swap, the alternator light on the dash has always been on; however, the the alternator seemed to charge the battery fine. This alternator lasted for about two years until it finally gave up. Since I had a lifetime replacement at Pep Boys, I was able to get another one for free.
I replace it, and it worked fine for about 2 months, until this one talso died.
I made it home one night as the headlights dimmed and finally went out as I pulled into my driveway.
Back to Pep Boys for another one. This time I got a Bosch rebuilt. The quality on this one seemed better. Immediately on hooking it up, the charging light on the dash went out, which leads me to beleive that the other alternators were putting out enough amps to charge the battery enough to keep it going, but not enough to make the light went out.
I ran this Bosch alternator for about 2 weeks, and last night I opened the hood to check the water in my leaky radiator, when I noticed that the output connector on my amp was glowing bright RED. The nut that holds the charging cable was white hot! This was about 2 or 3 minutes after starting the car up.
I immediately turned the car off. The cable had begun to melt at the connection, but I turned it off before there was any serious damage.
This leads me to beleive that the problem is comming from the alternator itself. If the short had been with the wiring harness, the cable would have melted at the other end.
The charging light did not turn on. I had my lights, A/C and stereo on at the time, but like I said, the car could not have been running for more than a couple of minutes before I open the hood and noticed the glowing connector.
I am sure that if I had not opened the hood to fill the radiator, my SHO would have caught on fire.
I will check it again when I get back from work today, but it looks like this alternator is no good.
Any electrical help would be appreciated, since this is not my strong point. I had been considering running a 00 gauge cable directly from the alternator output to the possive post on my battery before this happened. I have done this on my other cars with no poblems.
Any ideas as to what could cause this dangerous situation? Is it the alternator that is bad, or is it my wiring harness that is damaging the alternator?
Help!
Jose
I replace it, and it worked fine for about 2 months, until this one talso died.
I made it home one night as the headlights dimmed and finally went out as I pulled into my driveway.
Back to Pep Boys for another one. This time I got a Bosch rebuilt. The quality on this one seemed better. Immediately on hooking it up, the charging light on the dash went out, which leads me to beleive that the other alternators were putting out enough amps to charge the battery enough to keep it going, but not enough to make the light went out.
I ran this Bosch alternator for about 2 weeks, and last night I opened the hood to check the water in my leaky radiator, when I noticed that the output connector on my amp was glowing bright RED. The nut that holds the charging cable was white hot! This was about 2 or 3 minutes after starting the car up.
I immediately turned the car off. The cable had begun to melt at the connection, but I turned it off before there was any serious damage.
This leads me to beleive that the problem is comming from the alternator itself. If the short had been with the wiring harness, the cable would have melted at the other end.
The charging light did not turn on. I had my lights, A/C and stereo on at the time, but like I said, the car could not have been running for more than a couple of minutes before I open the hood and noticed the glowing connector.
I am sure that if I had not opened the hood to fill the radiator, my SHO would have caught on fire.
I will check it again when I get back from work today, but it looks like this alternator is no good.
Any electrical help would be appreciated, since this is not my strong point. I had been considering running a 00 gauge cable directly from the alternator output to the possive post on my battery before this happened. I have done this on my other cars with no poblems.
Any ideas as to what could cause this dangerous situation? Is it the alternator that is bad, or is it my wiring harness that is damaging the alternator?
Help!
Jose