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Pegged amp gauge

Started by lasvegas69charg, July 17, 2014, 06:53:37 PM

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lasvegas69charg

Hi. I was driving the other night and noticed the amp gauged pegged to the right. First thing I did I was come home and did a search here on the forums. I have checked everything out per the searches that I found. Voltage battery is 12.6. When the car is running the battery voltage is 13.9. When I disconnect the voltage reg the gauge goes back to 0. I changed out the voltage reg with a new one and still same issue. All the wiring is new in the car and have never had this problem before. I have a power master 7509 90amp alternator in the car that i bought new about 1.5 years ago. There is also a really bad electrical burning smell coming from the alternator and when I have the wire connected to the voltage reg there is a slight whine coming from the alt but goes away if I disconnect the wire on the voltage reg. The car is still wired as factory setup. I'm guessing the alt is bad. Any suggestions?
69 dodge charger 383/727/3.55 (my dad is the original owner-matching number) stroked to a 496😉

b5blue

Sounds like the regulator has puked. (Runaway charge.) Check bulkhead connectors also. (They burn quickly.)

lasvegas69charg

I replaced it with a new voltage reg and stills pegged. All the wires and connectors look new.
69 dodge charger 383/727/3.55 (my dad is the original owner-matching number) stroked to a 496😉

Pete in NH

Hi,

How old is the battery? I'm wondering if you have a shorted cell in the battery. If you have another battery you can swap in, I think it would be worth a try. From your voltage measurements it would seem the alternator and regulator are trying to do their job correctly. It just seems the alternator is trying to supply a lot of current.

lasvegas69charg

Hi Pete. The battery is a 1.5 years old. It's a optima red top battery.
69 dodge charger 383/727/3.55 (my dad is the original owner-matching number) stroked to a 496😉

b5blue

A short would do the same.  :scratchchin:

lasvegas69charg

If there was a short would a fuse blow?
69 dodge charger 383/727/3.55 (my dad is the original owner-matching number) stroked to a 496😉

b5blue

Not if it's in front of the fuse.  :scratchchin:  Isolate the main feed from the alt and check for continuity to ground. If a wire got hot and melted inside a bundle it could cross to another circuit. (You reported a stink smell.)  Do have the battery checked, I'd remove the alt and have it bench checked also.  :2thumbs: This will be a process of elimination.

lasvegas69charg

Battery checked out good. I checked the alt for grounding issues and I disconnect the bulkhead connectors and went thru the connectors for grounded terminals. Didn't come up with anything. My last resort is the alt. I have the powermaster 7509 using the stock voltage reg. I was thinking about going to 7409 one wire. After reading powermaster website all you have to do is connect a wire from alt to battery. By doing this will my amp gauge still work in the car? Will there be any other wiring needed to be done?
69 dodge charger 383/727/3.55 (my dad is the original owner-matching number) stroked to a 496😉

Ghoste

Doesn't solve your problem but I thought I'd add that if you are running a higher output alternator on the car you might want to consider bypassing the ammeter and some other wiring upgrades. :shruggy: :Twocents:

b5blue

We never covered what regulator you have or even year/mods to car.  :shruggy: I see a 69 in your pic. is that it? 69 different from 70 up reg. and mods to stock ignition?
   I have no info for one wire alts for you. If it ran good for 1.5 years I'd be inclined to find/fix as is but know nothing about Powermaster.

lasvegas69charg

its a 69 with msd ready to run ign, powermaster 90 amp alternator with stock electronic voltage reg with msd atomic fuel injection.  Otherwise all wiring is new and stock going into bulkhead and under dash.
69 dodge charger 383/727/3.55 (my dad is the original owner-matching number) stroked to a 496😉

b5blue

Quote from: lasvegas69charg on July 19, 2014, 11:21:13 AM
its a 69 with msd ready to run ign, powermaster 90 amp alternator with stock electronic voltage reg with msd atomic fuel injection.  Otherwise all wiring is new and stock going into bulkhead and under dash.
"Stock electronic voltage reg." is a one field wire for 69? (My car is 70, 2 field, solid state reg.) I've seen posts of 68-69 type solid state regulators not calibrated correctly yet they function. I think in Hot Rod mag. fixing car write ups. (?) 

lasvegas69charg

yes its a one wire field alt and voltage reg.
69 dodge charger 383/727/3.55 (my dad is the original owner-matching number) stroked to a 496😉

b5blue

Lets hope Pete chimes in on single field testing.  :scratchchin: Something is triggering full output.

lasvegas69charg

69 dodge charger 383/727/3.55 (my dad is the original owner-matching number) stroked to a 496😉

Pete in NH

I looked up a Powermaster 7509 alternator and the description calls it a 90 Amp, two field wire alternator. A two wire fields alternator is meant to be used on a 1970 on up Mopar with the electronic regulator system. A 1969 used a single wire field alternator with an electromechanical regulator.  Many of these older electromechanical regulators have been replaced with an electronic replacement type that is not the same as the 1970 and up Chrysler electronic type. These 1969 and earlier electronic replacements are all after market units and many are of Chinese origin and on questionable quality.

To use that Powermaster 7509 you would need to ground one of the alternator field terminals and connect the green wire from the regulator to the other field terminal. A 1969 type stock regulator will have one blue wire going into a push on spade type terminal and a green wire on a separate terminal to the alternator. Is that what you have on your car?

Also, make sure the regulator mounting is well grounded. Old, half stripped out, rusty sheet metal screws do not make for good grounds.

A picture of the regulator and back of the alternator would sure be helpful at this point.

b5blue

Pete I'm glad your here!  :2thumbs:

lasvegas69charg

I have the alt set us a single field. I originally did that when I did the install. I have a good solid ground on the voltage reg using a star washer behind the voltage reg.

Here is what I found out today because since this has happen the only change I did was installed a different fuel pump for my fuel injection.

If I keep everything like it is and I start the car the amp gauge goes to +40.
If I connect the fuel pump to a separate stand alone 12v battery and start the car the amp gauge goes to +20 then very slowly starts dropping due to charging the battery.

My car is wired with new wire harness and it's stock. I haven't did any parallel wiring as nacho has describe in other post. Could the fuel pump be drawing this much current to cause this? I know my power wire coming from my msd atomic computer is the same gauge as the wire going from the alt to the bulkhead. My msd atomic computer is wired directly to the battery. I am no electrician guru but would connecting a 8 gauge wire from alt to battery be the fix?
69 dodge charger 383/727/3.55 (my dad is the original owner-matching number) stroked to a 496😉

b5blue

Crap now you tell us..... :lol: You must be feeding the pump from battery so the regulator sees low battery and is pumping through the ALT gauge to top up the battery. Mopar feeds everything off Alt. output, the battery just starts the car.  :2thumbs: You can add a 40amp relay to feed the pump that is activated by ignition switch.  Tap alt. output to supply power. 

lasvegas69charg

Msd instruction say to connect to battery. What your saying is I should actually take that to the output of the alt instead?  I believe the new fuel pump draws more current than the old fuel pump but I didn't think nothing of it. I thought a fuel pump was a fuel pump. Should I also place my car amp to the alt output also or keep it to the battery? Sorry for leaving that part out.  :o
69 dodge charger 383/727/3.55 (my dad is the original owner-matching number) stroked to a 496😉

b5blue

Well if you want to retain all that new harness and the "way" the factory figured it out yes. GM's of the same vintage all draw everything from the battery, they were designed that way. What you have I can't speak with any authority on as I've no experience with MSD injection or otherwise and no Power Master Alt. to boot. I do know if your wiring is stock... whatever draws off the battery will be replaced from Alt. output into the harness, through the bulkhead, past the main splice that feeds the fuses, into-through-out of the ALT gauge back through the bulkhead to the starter relay main feed and finally back to the battery. How your running a 2 field Alt with one wire I don't know, I think one field should be grounded? Again I don't know for certain. (My Denso matched 70 Charger wiring closely.) The part about the gauge reading 20 and returning to center is correct it should and did read that way. If drawing anything off the battery it would read off the left side of the gauge. (So things were working and seemed okay whatever you had going on!) 

lasvegas69charg

Thank you Neal for helping me fix my problem. :2thumbs: I have the 2nd field grounded. It came with instructions if the car was a 1 field.
There was one thing in the post that I'm confused. You said the gauge should be to the left if draining from the battery. With the way I have the msd efi connected to the battery my gauge is to the far right +40.
Also is there any other ways of wiring it besides going straight to the alt output or would say that will the best route for both my msd efi and car amp?
Thank you again.  :cheers: I was about ready to buy a new alternator.
69 dodge charger 383/727/3.55 (my dad is the original owner-matching number) stroked to a 496😉

Pete in NH

If you think of the ammeter as an indicator of whether current is going into or out of the battery it helps you understand how this system works. The Chrysler designers intended the ammeter to do just that, tell you whether the battery was charging or discharging. When you add things like amplifiers and fuel pumps connected to the battery, the ammeter thinks the load current is battery charging current and the needle swings to the right.

You have to remember that in these 40+ year-old cars electrical system demands were relatively small. Fuel pumps were mechanical and sound systems were 2 watt AM radios. The designers never thought about electric fuel pumps or big sound systems. In these cars the wiring size, ammeter and bulk head connector pins limit how much current you can move around safely. The original alternators were 45 amps max. and that is what the system can handle.

If I were going to try to add things, as Neal said, they need to go on the alternator output to keep the ammeter working correctly. But, it really goes further than this. because the system wiring is going to struggle with the new 90 amp alternator and loads put on it by the new accessories. How big is your new sound system? If you are trying to run a big sound system , it may be time to think about some re-wiring and bypassing the ammeter and going to a voltmeter. And as Neal suggested the fuel pump should be controlled by a relay and provided with its own fuse.

lasvegas69charg

     Hi Peter. Thank you for the info. I understand it now. I just have 2 small alpine car amps. One amp pulls 10 amps and the other pulls 15 amps. With the stereo on the only time the amp gauge moves to the right is when there is alot of bass in the music.
    I just got done wiring the amp main power supply 6ga wire and the msd computer 12ga wire to the alternator output post. The msd computer is internally protected and has a built-in relay to power the fuel pump which doesn't require a fuse or relay. I haven't started the car up yet to test it because I am also doing a few other things to her.
    Since its really hot here in Vegas, I usually run the AC most of the time.  Would it be a good idea to put a relay on the fan blower motor   OR   run a 10ga parallel wire from alt output post to the charge side(right side) of the ammeter   OR    run a 10ga wire from alt output post to starter relay battery post?
69 dodge charger 383/727/3.55 (my dad is the original owner-matching number) stroked to a 496😉

lasvegas69charg

here is some of before relocating wires pics
69 dodge charger 383/727/3.55 (my dad is the original owner-matching number) stroked to a 496😉

lasvegas69charg

msd computer for efi pic...
69 dodge charger 383/727/3.55 (my dad is the original owner-matching number) stroked to a 496😉

lasvegas69charg

pic...
69 dodge charger 383/727/3.55 (my dad is the original owner-matching number) stroked to a 496😉

lasvegas69charg

pic of back of alt...
69 dodge charger 383/727/3.55 (my dad is the original owner-matching number) stroked to a 496😉

b5blue

Nice work! If the whole thing was working okay before and the new pump is the problem: Add a power to new pump feed off the alt. that is triggered by a relay turned on by the MSD box. (Least amount of reworking.)

lasvegas69charg

Here is the wire diagram for the msd efi.  Its just one wire to the battery or in my case to the alternator output post. The fuel pump is powered by the msd computer...Thanks Neal and peter  :cheers:
69 dodge charger 383/727/3.55 (my dad is the original owner-matching number) stroked to a 496😉

Pete in NH

I would run a new 8 gauge wire from the alternator output stud directly to the ammeter (right side) and another new 8 gauge wire from the other side of the ammeter to the starter relay battery stud through a 50 amp Maxi-fuse in a holder. I would then disconnect the existing wire from the bulk head connector to the starter relay battery stud and tape it off. This will give you what Chrysler called the fleet bypass modification and will get the troublesome bulkhead connector pins out of the way. That way you will not have to worry about blower motor or other loads stressing the bulk head connector pins.

lasvegas69charg

Pete so run the lines parallel from alt to ammeter thru ammeter to battery stud on starter relay with fuse and remove fusible link?
69 dodge charger 383/727/3.55 (my dad is the original owner-matching number) stroked to a 496😉

Pete in NH

Yes, I would remove the existing black #12 gauge wire from the alternator output stud that goes to the bulk head connector pin and tape it off. Then run a new # 8 gauge black wire from the alternator output stud directly through a grommeted hole on the fire wall to the ammeter. Then run a new #8 gauge red wire from the other side of the ammeter through the same hole in the firewall. Between this wire and the battery stud on the starter relay , I would but the new 50 or 60 amp Maxi-Fuse. You can then remove the existing fusible link. Chrysler did something like this at the factory on B body cars with big alternators. This modification takes the weak link of the bulk head connector pins out of the picture. It also gets rid of the fusible link and gives you a more modern fuse that is easily replaced if need be. I've even seen those Maxi-Fuses for sale in my local hardware store. The old fusible link isn't so easily replaced.

Nacho-RT74

Quote from: Pete in NH on July 20, 2014, 09:22:08 AM
If you think of the ammeter as an indicator of whether current is going into or out of the battery it helps you understand how this system works. The Chrysler designers intended the ammeter to do just that, tell you whether the battery was charging or discharging. When you add things like amplifiers and fuel pumps connected to the battery, the ammeter thinks the load current is battery charging current and the needle swings to the right.


and that's what add unnecesary stress on all the charging system.

Sorry I entered late to this, but everything has pretty much summed out by Neal and Pete.

Yes, MSD advices to hook everything from batt, but How much load grabs their devices to this? Of course this is not good with ammeter equipped cars. MSD ignition system doesn't sucks really A LOT of load so the original charging system ( mantenience would be mandatory though ) could alow this, but EFI system? dunno.

Actually WHAT I would do ? keeping ammeter of course replace ( or add parallel ) the charging wires from and to the ammeter, bypassing bulkhead terminals AND maybe add a BUS to attach extra devices on engine bay on black side of the ammeter to keep the correct reading on ammeter.

Somewhere on the web sometime ago I found an ISOLATED bus stud with TWO SIDES... this could make you use this to get sources inside and outside the cab, and in fact use this to go through the firewall between alt and ammeter, drilling the hole on firewall and attaching this bus stud there.
Venezuelan RT 74 400 4bbl, 727, 8.75 3.23 open. Now stroked with 440 crank and 3.55 SG. Here is the History and how is actually: http://www.dodgecharger.com/forum/index.php/topic,7603.0/all.html
http://www.dodgecharger.com/forum/index.php/topic,25060.0.html




Nacho-RT74

Venezuelan RT 74 400 4bbl, 727, 8.75 3.23 open. Now stroked with 440 crank and 3.55 SG. Here is the History and how is actually: http://www.dodgecharger.com/forum/index.php/topic,7603.0/all.html
http://www.dodgecharger.com/forum/index.php/topic,25060.0.html

b5blue

I just ordered weather proof bulkhead "pass through" grommets. Black plastic nut/bolt looking things that have a hole in the center. It has a cap with a rubber seal in it and you run the wire through the hole tighten the cap and it seals around the wire. No extra connections. I'll see if I can find a link.


Nacho-RT74

yeah, that's the usual way to make it, but the junction block gives you the chance to get a BUSS source ( being double side, inside and outside the cab )  for any extra devices without need to run a full wire to alt or batt.

In fact, to run devices sourced from alt side, you are saving some feet on wiring, getting a closer source to the batt as posible, still being on alt side ;)

just another option to make it though
Venezuelan RT 74 400 4bbl, 727, 8.75 3.23 open. Now stroked with 440 crank and 3.55 SG. Here is the History and how is actually: http://www.dodgecharger.com/forum/index.php/topic,7603.0/all.html
http://www.dodgecharger.com/forum/index.php/topic,25060.0.html

Nacho-RT74

And even remove wiring for any reason, without deal with body obstacles ( like Phords )
Venezuelan RT 74 400 4bbl, 727, 8.75 3.23 open. Now stroked with 440 crank and 3.55 SG. Here is the History and how is actually: http://www.dodgecharger.com/forum/index.php/topic,7603.0/all.html
http://www.dodgecharger.com/forum/index.php/topic,25060.0.html

lasvegas69charg

Thanks Pete, Neil and Nacho for the info. Pete-wouldn't I want to keep the factory 12ga wire from alt to bulkhead? By eliminating the wire will it still feed everything for the car?
69 dodge charger 383/727/3.55 (my dad is the original owner-matching number) stroked to a 496😉

Pete in NH

Yes, you could keep the #12 gauge black wire from the alternator to bulk head connector in place. Your new #8 gauge wire would run in parallel with it and take most of the current load. This existing #12 black wire goes from the alternator through a bulk head connector pin to A big welded wire splice Chrysler calls a "splice joint", from there it goes to one side of the ammeter. That welded splice is where all the cars electrical loads tie in. My personal preference is not to cut wires so things can be put back to factory original if desired. That is why I suggested disconnecting the black wire at the alternator output stud and taping it up and out of the way. You run your new # 8 gauge black wire directly to the ammeter terminal with the existing black wire. Leaving the existing black wire in place to feed power to the electrical loads in the car.  

I just like the idea of getting the bulk head connector pins totally out of the picture in the charging circuit.

Nacho-RT74

the splice joint would be sourced just from ammeter stud with the new wire and not from alt stud anymore if you don't keep it connected. MaMopar did it on that way on high optioned cars with big alts. On these cars, the wire between bulkhead and alternator was unexistant, just the straight path through the firewall, but underdash harness remaint the same than the rest. Not a big deal, but I preffer to keep it, won't hurt anything actually. Just about prefference... it is already there, worked all this time, no reason to not use it anymore, even more now reinforced

You'll need of course to keep the existant 12 gauge still attached to ammeter and simply attach the new one to make that. Clean all terminals to get success
Venezuelan RT 74 400 4bbl, 727, 8.75 3.23 open. Now stroked with 440 crank and 3.55 SG. Here is the History and how is actually: http://www.dodgecharger.com/forum/index.php/topic,7603.0/all.html
http://www.dodgecharger.com/forum/index.php/topic,25060.0.html

lasvegas69charg

ok.  thanks Pete and Nacho for the good info.  I will be upgrading the wiring this weekend.
69 dodge charger 383/727/3.55 (my dad is the original owner-matching number) stroked to a 496😉

lasvegas69charg

Hi Pete , Neil and Nacho. I did the upgrade. I ran 8ga from alt to ammeter with a termination block inbetween where I connected my amp and efi to. I also disconnected existing black wire from alt stud and taped and still keeping the black wire connected to ammeter to power the splice. I then ran a 8ga from red side of ammeter to maxi 50a fuse to starter relay stud. Completely bypassing bulkhead. Battery has full charge. I started the car and the gauge went to +30 and then quickly went between 0 and +10 but it's not a steady needle it's very erratic needle moving very very quickly. I raised the rpm with no change. Is this normal?
69 dodge charger 383/727/3.55 (my dad is the original owner-matching number) stroked to a 496😉

Pete in NH

Hi,

Very good on making the upgrades to your electrical system. The ammeter needle should not be very erratic as you're describing. The ammeter should settle down to a steady reading of just slightly above the center 0 position when the battery is fully charged.

I would check for loose connections in the system. Look at the voltage regulator connections and make sure the regulator case is well grounded. Half stripped out sheet metal screws and rust do not make for a good ground. The alternator brushes could also be worn down or not have proper spring tension on them. Also, I'm not a fan of the clamp on battery terminals you show in your photos. I would start there in looking for loose connections. A better battery terminal replacement is to use marine battery terminals and crimped on ring lugs on the cables.  Then you use the bolts on the marine battery terminals to attach the rings lugs to. This gives you a nice tight positive contact area. Something you can never get with those clamp on wire terminals.

lasvegas69charg

Thanks Pete. I will check out all my connections and I will try another voltage reg. The good thing is that the ammeter is closer to zero than before and I feel a lot better with the thicker gauge wire in place. I am wondering if the fuel injectors are causing the erratic needle movement.  I was actually dreading on doing this project but it only took a couple of hours.
69 dodge charger 383/727/3.55 (my dad is the original owner-matching number) stroked to a 496😉

Pete in NH

I missed that EFI conversion, so, yes the ammeter could very well be responding to the injectors firing. Especially if they are still sourcing their current from the battery when the alternator output isn't high enough.

lasvegas69charg

Pete, i sourced the efi and car amp from the alt. are you saying if the alt output isn't great enough at lower rpm that it would be coming from the battery hence making the gauge almost imitating the fuel injectors firing off with the erratic behavior of the needle? If so how would I fix that, an alt that produces more amps at low rpm? Is there a way to see how many amps I'm drawing on dc current?
69 dodge charger 383/727/3.55 (my dad is the original owner-matching number) stroked to a 496😉

Pete in NH

That could be the issue, not enough alternator output a low engine RPM's to keep up with the increased load on the electrical system. There are ways to measure the current being drawn by various loads, the easiest being a clamp on DC ammeter. These type on ammeters clamp over wires by opening their clamp jaws and have a wire output that plugs into a standard voltmeter. The most common ones are for AC current, you need a DC current one and they are harder to find and more expensive. With that DC ammeter you could clamp it on the EFI system wire and see how much current it is taking and do the same with your stereo amp. And then measure the current coming out of the alternator.

Most alternators do not have very good output at low RPM's which is why people go to really big alternators trying to keep up with the load at low RPM's.

Nacho-RT74

Quote from: Pete in NH on July 26, 2014, 12:06:12 PM
I missed that EFI conversion, so, yes the ammeter could very well be responding to the injectors firing. Especially if they are still sourcing their current from the battery when the alternator output isn't high enough.

agreed

Quote from: Pete in NH on July 27, 2014, 09:20:15 AM

Most alternators do not have very good output at low RPM's which is why people go to really big alternators trying to keep up with the load at low RPM's.

once more, agreed.

once you solve that, will notice the BIG PROBLEM on our cars is preciselly that, MORE THAN THE WEAKNESS ITSELF on bulkhead!
Venezuelan RT 74 400 4bbl, 727, 8.75 3.23 open. Now stroked with 440 crank and 3.55 SG. Here is the History and how is actually: http://www.dodgecharger.com/forum/index.php/topic,7603.0/all.html
http://www.dodgecharger.com/forum/index.php/topic,25060.0.html

lasvegas69charg

For giggles I put the old voltage reg that I had on there before and it corrected the erratic ammeter.  With the car running, Ac on, all lights on, flashers on, the guages is barely to the right of the 0. I checked all the new wiring (fleet bypass) that I did(8ga) and its barely warm ;D. Thanks again guys.  :2thumbs:
69 dodge charger 383/727/3.55 (my dad is the original owner-matching number) stroked to a 496😉

b5blue