As the brushes wear it will get to the point that the alternator is no longer supplying enough current so, yes they fade away. A blown diode would cause a sudden failure.
Regards,
Tote
My batteries are getting long in the tooth, about 5 years. I was disappointed with their performance running my Engel (turned out I was being unfair, it was hot in there and got 2 days off the aux).
Anyway I had cause to measure how well they keep charge. Seem to hold about 12.7/12.8 volts. Is that okay?
At idle, my original 1996 alternator pumps in 13.7 volts. Is that okay?
Dumb questions but I have no idea.
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As the brushes wear it will get to the point that the alternator is no longer supplying enough current so, yes they fade away. A blown diode would cause a sudden failure.
Regards,
Tote
Go home, your igloo is on fire....
2014 Chile Red L494 RRS Autobiography Supercharged
MY2016 Aintree Green Defender 130 Cab Chassis
1957 Series 1 107 ute - In pieces
1974 F250 Highboy - Very rusty project
Assorted Falcons and Jeeps.....
Yes and yes and yes and yes. Brushes, diodes, regulators, wires etc can go partly or fully dead. Yours sounds like it's OK at the moment!
Not sure how easy one would be to fit re dash etc, but a volt meter is a good thing to have and cheap enough to buy and simple to wire in. Got a digital 24 volt and a digital 12 volt of evil bay for about $8 each posted.
Cheers Hall
Maybe alternators do not fade away often but batteries certainly do.My batteries are getting long in the tooth, about 5 years. I was disappointed with their performance running my Engel (turned out I was being unfair, it was hot in there and got 2 days off the aux).
Batteries lose a % of their Amp hours every year and after 5 years I would be surprised if your batteries are not 30% down from new. I have a perfectly good 6 year old AGM under the house which I took out and replaced because it had lost capacity and didn't run the Engle long enough.
With alternators, the usual failure is a diode short circuit , and the red light comes on.It can happen that brushes wear to the point of not contacting , but also the red light will come on then usually at start up for a while. But I am pretty sure that alternators do not die slowly, unless a diode has gone open circuit and the alternator output is reduced considerably.
Having 13.7 volts at idle is not really a good indicator as a diode could be gone , but if the demand has been less than the output , the batteries could still be fully charged.
As hall says ,it is a good idea to have 2 volt meters, and you can tell what the batteries are doing and how the alternator is doing. I recall on mine on rough roads, I would show 14.2 which would suddenly drop to 13.1 regularly. Turned out to be a battery going open circuit on bumps, presumably because it had an internal crack in the conductor.
Regard sPhilip A
The only 'abnormal' thing here is that your batterys are perfectly OK after 5 years use.
For a common or garden variety lead acid battery perfectly normal.
Again, perfectly normal for an alternator matched to common or garden variety lead acid batterys.
Only dumb if you don't ask.
Wish my batterys lasted this long.
Deano![]()
Thanks everyone.
That was useful. I think Ill wait patiently for my batteries and alternator to clag themselves before replacing them. Will be going outback in July probably maybe before then I will have another think. Peace of mind purchase of new batteries is one thing but new alternator?
Incidentally, I have a very basic dual battery set up, some say too basic. Manual switch brings in second cranking battery otherwise everything runs off the first battery including all 12v plugs, so it kinda has a deep cycle life.
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James your memory is obviously better than mine.
Regards Philip A
You can buy a Scan gauge 2 from the US for between $100 or $200. It plugs into the diagnostics plug under the dash, OBDI or something.
It has been 6 or so years since I bought mine but you can set it to tell you all sorts of info including volts etc.
It works in real time & over the years it has been a very handy Peirce of kit. It attaches wherever suits you by velcro & can be moved from car to car (mine is in the 3rd) & it will save you chopping up your dash.
I have no interest in the company just like the little machine.
Try googling it.
Jonesfam
Batteries do wear out but batteries can display very organic types of behaviour. EG in a good battery you can have it totally discharged, then if you charge it fast it quickly gives you full voltage but the battery is not full so when you use it it discharges fast because it was never properly charged. To get around this you need a longer charge time probably at smaller amps. You can have the opposite of this effect too which alkaline batteries display well, which is a full battery which if used quickly with large amperage draw it gets a low voltage fast giving the impression on a multimeter of a depleated battery which is not true as it may still be 60% full. Over time it reaches new equilibrium and the voltage goes up. Of course old batteries loose so much capacity that they charge and discharge very quickly. Car batteries are not deep cycle batteries and can only be discharged 5 to 10% at the most without damaging them. They have thin plates for max surface area = cranking amps, but then needs a quick recharge from the engine to keep them in good condition. I have heard of car batteries lasting 14 years in a charger! Deep cycle batts can go to 20% discharge without damage due to thick plates which cannot offer much instant power but are very good for a fridge.
To protect your batteries you can buy a megapulse which I have seen some good anecdotal results from but have no scientific evidence to show they work. The theory is that it pulses the plates with electricity from the battery itself. This vibration shakes and keeps the sulphur build up off the plates and keeps them operating for many times a batteries normal working life and can bring old batteries back to top condition.
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