...Many years ago I ran across someone that isolated his alternator and installed diodes in series with the ground to increase the perceived output voltage.
The voltage at the battery "should" be "all over the place" with respect to the "regulator set points". The reason is simple. You have 30 to 120 Amp alternators or so depending on the model. "Load" will change the output because you don't do sensing at the battery terminals.
A "better place" to do "regulation checks" is the alternator terminal heading to the battery on the alternator. There it will be influenced much less by the amount of accessories turned on.
I tend to write down in the service manual, or I used to, the drop from the alternator to the battery with the heater, AC and high beam on. It was my way of measuring the alternator output (a reference) for troubleshooting. I now have an AC/DC clamp meter.
Do you know how they run the wire to that box, is it through the ignition switch or directly wired or maybe a relay ?Actually, the VR in most modern automobiles (not Mr Al's) senses the main electrical bus voltage, which is in the power distribution box where the big, main fuses are....
The main alternator output B lead is a #4-6 wire that goes directly to the + lead of the battery. There is a separate #8 wire that feeds the power distribution box. There is a small IR drop between the battery + pole and where the VR samples the bus voltage caused by the total electrical load (ECU, Dash, Fuel Pump, Lights, AC) . The VR sense voltage is not reduced by the IR drop along the B wire or along the box feed wire because those voltage drops are not inside the feedback loop to the VR. The VR holds the main bus voltage within mV, but the battery terminal voltage might be slightly higher by a few tens of mV.
Kiss is confused about the VR setting to achieve a fully charged battery. I have measured hundreds of cars, trucks, tractors, boats, and airplanes, and the VR setting has always been between 14V and about 14.7V with the engine turning 1200rpm or above. When Calcium was added to batteries about two decades ago, the setting was bumped up by about 300mV from what was common prior to ~1990.
If a flooded-cell lead-acid battery is charged only to ~13.8V or less, it never reaches full charge, it sulphates, and has a short life. One that is recharged to 14.2+V, especially when driven daily, seems to last three to five years. Even though 14.5V sounds too high, I think that this setting is compromise based on the fact that most vehicles are driven an hour or less in the morning, and again in the evening, and this setting provides quick recharge, keeps the battery at near full charge, provides a modicum of equalization, etc.
Another confusion factor is that standard automotive VRs are temperature compensated. They have a temperature sensor (usually a NTC thermistor). They reduce their voltage automatically as the engine compartment comes up to operating temperature. For example, my 2004 GMC pickup measured at the battery is at 14.7V after a cold start with engine reved. After been driven for 30min, with the engine compartment hot, the battery voltage is about 14.4V.
I have been fighting the temperature compensation issue with my Cessna 182. In early models, the battery, alternator, and external VR were all mounted in the engine compartment. Later in the model run, the battery was moved aft into the fuselage aft of the baggage compartment to improve the CG related handling of the aircraft. This leaves the VR subject to engine compartment temperatures, while the battery is freezing in an unheated part of the fuselage. It is one thing if the battery and VR are co-located and subject to the same temperatures; it is another where the VR is sensing the engine compartment temperature, but the battery is elsewhere.
This causes chronic undercharging of the battery, especially in winter months, because the VR reduces the charge voltage during flight to 13.9V or less, and the battery never recharges properly. The solution is to trick the VR....
Did you make that PCB with a chisel?View attachment 89313 View attachment 89314 View attachment 89315 View attachment 89316 This is the reverse engineered adj reg which is quite easy to construct & work quite well. I rev engineered it as they were no longer available & I needed another one.
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