I'm a Hino technician(Toyota commercial truck division) at a dealership, for those pesky harness clips, you can use the box end of a wrench, and push it over the clip and it will collapse the fingers and you can pop them off. The most commons sizes are 8mm and 10mm.
I was told when my 84 Celica GT-S was only 4 years old that the alternator was not serviceable yet the parts department of the Toyota dealership I had just started at had all the parts to rebuild it. $14 in parts compared to two paychecks was something I was thankful for but I was especially thankful for the parts guy, Dave, and one of the lead techs, Warren, for the lessons. It was the grandpa style too. Nothing is non serviceable if you know what you're doing and you are an encyclopedia of knowledge so I thank you for keeping my education moving forward.
When you speculated that the alternator could probably develop quite a bit of torque, that reminded me of a demonstration/experiment I did when I was a kid. I had a little 4 cyl Toyota that was basically a rolling stereo system - probably 1500 watt or so. I forget why I did it; probably was trying to test the alternator, but one time when it was running, I removed the positive cable from the battery and let it run off the alternator. I then proceeded to stall my engine with my volume knob. That was like the coolest thing ever back then haha.
Yea, I was that kid too! 1984 Mercury topaz with a 1000+ watts at the speakers sound system and 100 amp alternator. At idle a good bass hit would pull the engine RPM down at least 150 RPM! :D Parents hated that hobby, until I found girls. After that, the car audio didn't seem so bad, given that at least made me money on my free time. :P
@@nferraro222 Yep haha...and if you could afford it, you'd get the cool cap with the digital voltage display and the power distribution block built in...lol...like you said...Good Times
At 100 amp output, a12 volt alternator is producing 1400 Watts of power, and thus consuming at least 2 Horsepower. 2 hp on a belt driven shaft turning at 3600 rpm (60 rps) is 1100 ft-lbs/sec or about 20ft-lbs of torque
I have seen that before, A tight belt crushes the bearings on a normal alternator too. I saw one where the armature was actually worn because of it. Same fix as this, but way cheaper.
Great job explaining the newer style charging systems! I like having the conductance battery analyzer as well as the old time load tester. They are not as cost prohibitive as they once were and Ancel makes a good one.
Had the same issue on my wife's van, 230,000 miles. The alternator was charging fine, but the clutch was howling. I threw a rebuilt on & it works fine, nice & quiet. I did, however, change the belt, idler pulley & tentioner, which came in a kit. Of course, Murphy was there with me, and the locator pin on the tensioner snapped off in the timing cover. It was right next to the frame rail, so I had to drop the engine down about 2 inches to drill out the pin. Still running!
Wes I've thoroughly enjoyed your channel and started watching when you were working on the drag line. My grandpa ran one and showed me how when I was a kid. That said it sucks when your own stuff breaks down. Good video.
Wes, I really admire you dedication, explanations and work ethics. I can follow pretty good on the large equipment, but when you work on a regular car I can barely follow you. That is what I like about your videos. Keep them coming please.
Possible the tight dayco belt contributed to the bearing/clutch failure. You got it right about over priced crap to get that fuel economy to leave you stranded in the end. KISS is the answer. Great video in info Wes, thank you.
My 08 Toyota Tundra alternator did the same thing, even the noise. Took it off and it tested good at the parts store. So I put it back on. 3 days later dead battery again. So I took it off again and replaces it. Worked like a charm.
My Hyundai had generator failure. I made a new mount and took a regular Bosch generator from a Volvo. I connected it to the battery and then I removed the charge indicator in the dashboard. It has worked perfectly since. MiH🔔
The idea behind the new pulleys is a good one, just bad that they are a wear item that needs to be replaced as often as you replace your serpentine belt. I appreciate the old v-belts that didn't have these problems due to normal slippage. The serpentine belts grip too well and wreak havoc on the other parts connected to the pulleys. I have a VW that the alternator pulley caused the crank timing gear to strip and skip timing. Skipped enough to bend the valves. At first I couldn't figure out why it skipped, thanks to youtube I found the problem after watching several videos. I would have never guessed that the alternator pulley seizing could cause so much trouble.
Thank you again Wess. My Wife's 06 crv does some strange things. Well I guess it's normal for this over complicated way they do things today. Most noticeable is the heat and ac fan speed. There is a delay of a few seconds when you crank up the fan speed. Also the battery itself is not much bigger than my craftsman lt 1000 riding mower battery. It like if they could they would have used bamboo to save weight building this car. Maybe they did? I've told my wife many a time while I'm working on her crv that her next vehicle is going to be a first gen ford bronco with some appropriate up grades to the brakes steering and suspension and drive train. I can build a whole vehicle from the frame up with all stuff available today. Plus when she's not looking I can steal it and go off roading. Have a great day Wess. Stay warm.
If memory serves me, dodge had the pcm controlled voltage regulator back in the day. I work for a OEM and it’s a simple answer on why stuff gets more complicated. Engineers get paid to design stuff, so they do. Gotta have something for the R&D guys to do.
Engineers design stuff to a purpose and a price. Way too much to do to just redesign crap for no reason. It is always being made better, or cheaper, rarely both...
Thanks for the educational videos. Alternator bad at 200K+ miles not too big of a deal, but the oil consumption issue definitely was. My Tacoma (5VZ-FE 3.4L V6) with 8 more years and 50K+ more miles has had less problems (pinhole leak in radiator and worn out starter). Disappointing to see Toyota's quality has dipped.
You’re an excellent mechanic. Perhaps the new, tight, Dayco belt accelerated the death of the alternator. But 220k miles is pretty damn good anyway. Keep up the good work.
I never replaced a new battery after five years.......probably because i never kept a vehicle for five years! my battery tester is a carbon pile and i agree with you.....you cant beat it....simple and reliable results every time. chrysler uses those decoupling pulleys. i have replaced several alternators. they were not cheap. 225k miles is a good service out of that alternator. my sunday morning started with a river of power steering fluid coming from the steering box on my freightliner....couldnt find that on a sunday morning....
This man knows his stuff.. and even on the slight off chance he does make a mistake he owns it and learns from it.. when I first started watching I was skeptical.. but after watching and I mean like beng watching for a few days lol I've learned so many helpful little tips and tricks that I'm sure to use in the future as well.. thank you for sharing your knowledge and skills it's greatly appreciated.. being an automotive tech myself for over 20 years now it's not an easy carrier by any means of the imagination lol.. happy new years to you and yours! Earned a lifetime subscriber here
The clutch mechanism standard for all Toyota engines, It saves the belt and alternator and let's it free spin to help with electrical surges. Also all alternators are made in Mexico by Denso Electric. Same supplier for GM and Ford. They also have an electric motor manufacturing plant in Tennessee.
Quick tip just test the alternator. Then check the temperature of the pully if its hotter than the alternator case it's bad. I checked the brushes and they are perfect on the original denso and both the slip ring and the brushes are perfect. All stator connections are brazed on the original denso. You won't find that on a leprechaun zoner reman. Gates 37171p is the decoupler pully.
Back starting in the late 80’s I think, Buick and Cadillac were doing something similar with their alternator as a way of smoothing out idling fluctuations and to improve engine smoothness itself. Around the same time they came out with the DA6 variable displacement ac compressor for the same reason instead of the on/off of the cutch controlled by the low side pressure cycling switch.
Great Channel ! I was out in a small town on a Sunday lost the alternator and it was the clutch. Ended up welding the clutch bearing and putting it back on. Made it home. I should really replace it someday haha.
I had one of those 'overrunning clutches' FALL OFF of VW alternator. Of course, I was 12 hours from home when it happened. Fortunately, the VW dealer understood my predicament and prioritized getting me back on the road.
This is some valuable information. Thanks for passing it along. I never knew about these smart charging systems. I feel as though this is gonna be very useful one day when I need to diagnose one of these new over enginenerded vehicles.
I think what you saw and heard when alternator was unplugged was an example of Lenz's Law where Eddy currents were being created that magnetically opposed the rotation of the alternator. It's the same type of braking action used in hub dynos, those rides at the fair that drop you then stop at bottom, etc. Probably diodes in the rectifier are stuck.
The overrunning clutch on alt. is NOT for fuel-savings.... it is to reduce the chances of belt coming off. Without overrunning clutch, when engine (crankshaft) DEcellerates quickly, the alternator may have enough torque to pull on the tensionor. This causes slack in the belt between alternator and next pulley. This slack may cause belt to spool off of that pulley. The overrun clutch 'soaks up' any torque from the alt. so it does not pull on the tensionor.
This a very common issue with the alternator using over driving clutch pulley, freeze or slip, this clutch is very useful for diesel engine for fuel saving and extending alternator and belt life and reduce engine noise as well , otherwise the rotor of the alternator keeping acceleration and deceleration. but it's not quite necessary for gasoline engine.
Add some purified water to the battery, I bet those cells are low at this point! Gotta love those decoupling clutches, they go when they go. They make your belts and alternator last longer though...
I once had the pulley come off entirely while diving. Wallered out the pulley, and it was on a Sunday. It wasn't noisy, in fact, quietest that engine ever ran. 😁
If your pulley was slipping badly enough to get totally wallowed out, there's no way you can get me to believe that it gave you no warning noises beforehand. You probably just weren't paying attention.
@@MFKR696 I didn't have much warning - I was on a highway at the time, so had to get pulled off. Engine was only turning around 1500 rpm, but the pulley was stamped steel, so it took just seconds to open the hole out.
@@kstricl I'm talking *weeks* beforehand, not just the day it failed, bud. It takes a long time for a problem like that to get that bad, and it would have given you plenty of warning signs if you had only been paying attention. I'm not trying to be mean, but shit like this is why I stay *way* back from the car in front of me on the highway.
I bought a cheap little battery tester, it isn't as good as a carbon load but it gives a pretty good idea on the battery health. It also has a running function where it checks the ripple. This gives you a good idea whether all three legs are working equally. If one leg isn't working due to an open wire or a damaged regulator you should be able to tell.
You're right about that RLO. I didn't even understand how it worked, but I have changed a ton of batteries on imports that have this setup, and that box on the battery regularly falls apart after about ten years or so. I always just bypass it and remove it from the system. I have never replaced one, and I have never had an unhappy customer. It is totally unnecessary.
I think the overrun clutch is there because of the closed loop control of the alternator. When the requested output of the alternator is zero, the rotor will spin at engine speed, but due to inertia and zero load, when the engine RPM drops, the alternator will free-spin. The overrun clutch prevents the flywheel energy of the alternator from acting on the engine, causing a negative torque input. For city type driving this could be a significant amount of negative torque over time. I bet the alternator is just wheeling along in stop-and-go traffic and the RLO output has a zero duty when the engine is in coast mode.
Yeah, that seems to be the idea. I guess when the alternator is not charging there is not enough EMF in the field to slow it down as quickly as the engine.
I still really like my old Toyota pickup. I have never seen an American designed vehicle as easy to work on. Oh and it gets 25 mpg with wooden racks for wood hauling.
Those slip clutches are a pain - I've had to do the field modification of jamming the clutch using a couple of self-tapping screws so the alternator would work so we could get home that night.
@@TUMBLINJEST It is new to me as I only have 90's vehicles from the US. That is all I said. I had to lookup a mondeo duratec as I had never heard of one.
@Richies Restorations I hate car payments. I would drive new. If I did not live in the saltiest place in the usa (MN) I would likely drive much older though.
Those pulleys help to eliminate the whip and lash in the belt as the engine accelerates and deccelerates between each power stroke. They massively reduce wear on other components like the tensioner. I've also seen a physical demonstration of the difference and it's plain to see, but do agree that it's yet another component to fail and bring a sprag clutch I've seen them do exactly as yours has.
I usually wait for about 5 seconds before i hit the like button i enjoy every video posted. Very informative and some nice old cool machines to learn about and watch run again.
Nice video, The wrong Blet was the failure of your Alternator. gotta say that had a battery issue with an Autozone battery and they tested it and replaced it for me, the battery was 1 month old, my guess it was the one bad you get in the batch but the guy took 5 mins to replace it in my car with a happy face and attitude, I'm in MA and it was 52f that day, I try giving him a tip and he said no, I put it in his shirt pocket anyways.
A little tip for you. Never apply dielectric grease to the mating surfaces. You can apply it after you install the wire. Dielectric means it does not conduct electricity. Cool video!
Ah the power of internet myths. I've done it thousands of times... This guy does some pretty simple testing to show that dielectric grease in no way will hinder an electrical connection.
Watch Wes Work my claim? It’s not a claim. Before the internet was cool dielectric was and still is dielectric grease. Perhaps you should study what the fuck dielectric means.
You said doody! Lol! $100 for over running clutch or $200-$300 for complete unit. Better for complete unit, since like you said, might still be some internal issues we don’t know about...make sure you keep the bill so you can try out warranty in another 200,000 miles.
This just popped up in my favorites and it’s the exact noise I tried troubleshooting on my daughter’s Camry yesterday! Sometimes the big brother algorithms ain’t that bad. 😀 Thanks Wes!
if I did that idk what my BMW would do. I know it goes into self preservation mode and turns all your shit off. no radio, heated seats, air. It goes into shock and gives the motor the last bit of power when the alternator dies. Ask me how I know. Its also to smart for its own good. If it detects the battery voltage drop to low it thinks the battery is DONE so it stops charging so it doesn't blow up and start a fire. Thing is I have an old BMW with an old battery that isn't driven often. It also has the upgraded alarm system so it has tilt sensors and motion detection inside the cabin so there's a constant drain when locked. After a few days of this and being winter in Illinois. She will start but the volts drop hard and the car freaks and starts turning stuff off and wont charge the battery. Its to smart for its own good. The second you give it a jump pack for just the startup its golden. Like nothing ever happened. I just leave it on the battery maintainer when not in use and no more problems.
Fun. They used them there clutch pulleys on Officer Friendlies' Crown Vic forever. Always thought they were there to keep the belt from squeaking with a sudden RPM drop, and to prevent stress on the belt, etc.
I think that's part of the reason. But I believe there is supposed to be a small efficiency gain. The alternator will actually coast up to 10 second from 2000 RPM.
I noticed right after I got my 2019 Silverado that the volt meter would jump between 11 and 14 seemingly randomly. Did a little research and found out that "they all do that". ECM tells the alternator when to charge basically. All to save a few ounces of fuel here and there. I also question the reliability of all this new electronic wizardry. It's all fun and cool when new. But get 5 or 10 years down the road and we'll see how reliable (and expensive) all this is. Sad part is that it takes a lot of DIYers including me out of the game. Like you said, "It's not your grandfather's alternator".
My RAV4 (2009) alternator gave out exactly the same way. I was an hour from home. Same whining sound. Had to have my daughter drive out to rescue the Dog and I.
My tundra with smart charge and regular pulley has a "alternator sense" fuse that will case communication loss to the ecu and charge at full output, with battery light. My altima with an overrunning clutch just has an alternator fuse and will full charge without a battery light when that fuse is removed. Seems like the alternator circuit in the fuse box is usually for sending battery voltage to the ecm.
GM vehicles have a current sensor too, but just a standard alternator. They must do some PWM on the field to dial back the charging system. I believe it also helps to avoid over charging the battery. Once it's recovered from starting the vehicle it really doesn't need many amps shoved into it anymore. Just enough to balance any loads on the cars system.
Hey Wes, Happy New Year. You’re a good repair, rebuild, and diagnostic man. Also I would ad, a great teacher! Yes, you’re teaching on the channel, thats why I watch. Hope you find time this year to return to the old Insley Dragline and find remainder of boom & bucket...very interesting.
I think it has been mentioned already, but the overrunning clutch is there not for fuel economy but to reduce belt vibrations and to allow the alternator to coast to a stop so the belt doesn't squeak and to reduce abrupt loads on the alternator. These issues are more pronounced on diesels - my A4 chassis Golf TDIs have the clutched alternator and when they fail you usually either don't charge due to it slipping or they will make a bad noise when the engine is shut off. Occasionally the entire sheave will depart the rest of the pulley, which is interesting.
This shows pretty positively the difference between a solid pulley, a one-way clutch, and a clutch and damper combo. th-cam.com/video/9beaAjKLBnY/w-d-xo.html
Clutch is there so that engine pulley dampening is not such an issue. Belt and tensioner, and dampener are not so stressed. Has nothing to do with fuel economy.
I would not be happy with the charging voltage at all. 13.2 to 14.0 is ideally where you want to be. New ‘smart’ alternators are a tad more difficult to deal with and ideally need to be on a proper test rig. The engine ECU monitors battery charging and if the battery is within preset tolerances it will de-activate the alternator field supply and stop charging. The overrun clutch simply stops the engine having to rotate the mass of the stator unnecessarily. They often seize up or fail completely and loose drive. All just one of the many minute tweaks to eke out a slither more efficiency.
I managed to score a pulley clutch OEM Toyota for $5. I'm not sure how everyone was asking $100. I figured it's worth the try at that point. I'm 100% certain the clutch is going bad I have had another alternator fail in a similar fashion. So as soon as I started detecting the early signs I started shopping around for a solution as I knew I had a little time. There is no battery light yet. Hopefully it fixes it up because 300 or more is a lot more than 5.
@@johanlundin5874 I thought it was just to keep them from chirping the belt when shut off. We had alternators on diesels for 40 years with no clutches and they held up just fine.
Thanks for posting. I don't have any vehicles new enough for this complex system but I often have to diagnose newer vehicles for friends or relatives and this information is very helpful
Kinda funny, what you mentioned about the battery cables. I used to do just smaller residential plumbing, then a little over a year ago I bought an old abandoned school to turn into a home. Everything is larger. Now when I pick up a piece of 1/2" copper pipe, it looks like a little pencil.
Wes, youre supposed to put the dielectric grease onto the tightened connection. Not in between the connection! As you said: It dielectric, so its got isolating properties. The purpose of that grease is to keep away oxygen and water. And not isolate the two contacts from each other. Same with batteries btw. Apply the grease after you installed the poleclamp and dont put it inbetween the clamp and the battery pole. And with plugs. Apply the grease around the outside of the plug, not directly onto the contacts. It may work the way you did it, but you definitely introduced a bit of resistance on this contact which wont help the charging system at all. Thanks for this awesome video, tho.
No. It's a myth that dielectric grease will increase resistance. The "dielectric" part mean that it does not form conductive carbon if burn by an electrical arc, which could happen with petroleum based grease. There are many TH-cam videos debunking this myth.
@@WatchWesWork I suggest you to read whats written on the packaging of that grease. Itll say the same as I did. Btw if you buy a new car, the battery poles will be treated exactly like I told you. Sprayed with dielectric grease after the pole clamp was tighened down. But hey, that was just a well meant tip. Of course youre free to do it as you want.
Yep common problem now, Auto Sparky 25 years, it is supposed to prolong the belt life I think or some rubbish, Changed mine out the other day as part of a 280000km service on my 2012 Hilux
I've seen engines that die because of alternator pulley. With certain Volvo diesel engines those pulleys fail and cause that serpentine belt to snap, those belt pieces go into timing belt case and you can guess the rest.
That's an old school way of thinking about the load tester, to be honest I thought the same way until it started causing road calls for batteries, batteries that tested good with a carbon pile load tester, tested as bad with the conductance type tester, so the carbon pile tester now sits in the tool crib, a carbo load tester can't test for a cell that's shorted or has a problem where a conductance tester can, think of it like testing a ignition coil with a multi meter, or a scope, both work but the scope provides you with a better picture of what's going on, 1 tech to another, after 29 years in the heavy duty diesel trade, sometimes it's hard to except the newer technology
Great video once again. Thanks for explanation of amp clamp in comments . By the way, my local walmart sells stainless steel zip ties. They seem to have less fatigue failure in areas of high vibration compared to the nylon type. I was shocked to find them there. Thank you.
I have had VERY poor luck with run-of-the-mill reman alternators. Although they carry very good warantee.... it is MY TIME which is spent constantly replacing when they crap out. I hope you have better luck with yours. I prefer a scrapyard OEM alternator to cheep reman.
Yeah, and it's not consistent. I normally get my alternators and starters from a local auto electric shop. It's all they do. But they are not open on Sunday, and we don't have a spare vehicle.
An 'old wives tale' that happens to be true is leaving batteries on concrete will discharge and help destroy the battery. Charging a battery while it is on concrete is less effective than putting the battery on wood. I don't know the scientific reasoning, but I do know it makes a significant difference. Take two charged batteries. Put one on wood and the other on concrete. In two days there will be a significant difference in the stored voltage. Good call on the alternator. Never saw a sprag clutch on an alternator, so again you taught me something. Thanks for sharing.
I believe your Toyota like all modern cars, at least that I'm aware of use a duty cycle charging method controlled by the ECM or a module, I don't know what advantage if any the freewheel pulley provides
just put alternator in my Sebring . Sounded like a bag of marbles in the engine . Figured sure as hell if i only replaced the pulley it would stop charging in a week . new pulley was 80 bucks and reman Mopar alternator was only 125 . Quite common noise on older Dodge Caravan also ,
Pro tip, go to tractor supply take a picture of their 2 year warranty battery labels and prices. Around me they are $30 cheaper at trac supply than Autozone and Autozone price matches the identical item and if it has the same or better warranty Also reman alternators or starters from the zone are always hit or miss. But with the lifetime warranty if you wanna get the new one later or it’s not that hard to replace then just keep swapping them in but new ones almost never have issues with they are usually almost worth the money if you have it 9:40 oh you might just need it haha Yes I have worked at Autozone on the side for over a year now.
the amps you mesured the first time were the amps pulled by the lights and drawn from the battery, not the amps delivered by the alternator... at the end off the video you mesured right, it was indeed the pulley.
So technically it doesn't matter. I was measuring total amperage of the system. The alternator was keeping up with the lights and still giving 20 amps to charge the battery.
That alternator was lacking on voltage. Unloaded they should produce 13.5-14 volts, fully loaded they should still produce over 13 volts. Anything less and you have a failing alternator. Hence why the battery light would come on and shut off. Output is never measured in amps on all newer electronics, it's not neccessary. You can have amperage but be lacking voltage. Amperage is the flow of electrons, voltage is makes then move, and ohms is the resistance to flow. Think of a garden hose, amperage being the flow of water, and voltage being the pressure needed to make the water move, and ohms being a restriction in the hose. You open the nozzle on the end of the hose and get nothing. You know there's water (amperage), but there's either not enough pressure or no pressure (volts) to make it move, and that's assuming there's no resistance or at least nothing out of spec. Now for your battery cable's, they are actually more efficient that the big cables your used to seeing. The finer the individual strands that make up the wire, the current it can actually handle because there's more surface area. I would rather have battery cables made with lots of fine strands of wire over, battery cables made with just a few large strands of wire.
Dodge avenger 2010-??? Same thing happened to me !! First time I came across a "over run pulley" I ended up buying a whole new unit. You can buy a non- over run unit from a Dodge van I believe to eliminate this but don't quote me. It's going strong.....for now.
Well......the big BMW alternators are sealed and they are coolant cooled. There are so many electric powered gizmos on board that the engineers went for squeezing as much juice out of the alternator and not letting a drop go to waste, all overlooked by the ECM. And in case of replacement, all new alternators have to be programmed to the chassis/VIN number or else it won't work. But, as we speak, the latest technology buzz are the fully electric cars (and buses, trucks,motor cycles). I got to drive one recently (a Nissan Leaf) and I am convinced of their performance. No alternators, exhaust system, pistons, valves etc.
Triple tested; one guy looked at it three times and said it looked like an alternator
Sure did! And he should know!
Hey, the guy was wearing a lab coat when he looked at it three times. That makes it official!
He alternatored his inspection eyes!
yep. the guy who rebuilt it. the guy who shipped it, and the guy to sold it.
More like one guy picked their nose 3 times....
I'm a Hino technician(Toyota commercial truck division) at a dealership, for those pesky harness clips, you can use the box end of a wrench, and push it over the clip and it will collapse the fingers and you can pop them off. The most commons sizes are 8mm and 10mm.
I was told when my 84 Celica GT-S was only 4 years old that the alternator was not serviceable yet the parts department of the Toyota dealership I had just started at had all the parts to rebuild it. $14 in parts compared to two paychecks was something I was thankful for but I was especially thankful for the parts guy, Dave, and one of the lead techs, Warren, for the lessons. It was the grandpa style too. Nothing is non serviceable if you know what you're doing and you are an encyclopedia of knowledge so I thank you for keeping my education moving forward.
Replacing an alternator, starter with part store's rebuilt one is for chumps. Fixing it with new parts is the way to go.
When you speculated that the alternator could probably develop quite a bit of torque, that reminded me of a demonstration/experiment I did when I was a kid. I had a little 4 cyl Toyota that was basically a rolling stereo system - probably 1500 watt or so. I forget why I did it; probably was trying to test the alternator, but one time when it was running, I removed the positive cable from the battery and let it run off the alternator. I then proceeded to stall my engine with my volume knob. That was like the coolest thing ever back then haha.
Wow lol, bad ass
And when the sub hit those big bass notes, the headlights would dim and the engine might stumble - time to add a 1 farad capacitor:) Good times.
Yea, I was that kid too! 1984 Mercury topaz with a 1000+ watts at the speakers sound system and 100 amp alternator.
At idle a good bass hit would pull the engine RPM down at least 150 RPM! :D
Parents hated that hobby, until I found girls. After that, the car audio didn't seem so bad, given that at least made me money on my free time. :P
@@nferraro222 Yep haha...and if you could afford it, you'd get the cool cap with the digital voltage display and the power distribution block built in...lol...like you said...Good Times
At 100 amp output, a12 volt alternator is producing 1400 Watts of power, and thus consuming at least 2 Horsepower. 2 hp on a belt driven shaft turning at 3600 rpm (60 rps) is 1100 ft-lbs/sec or about 20ft-lbs of torque
I wonder if that tight belt may have contributed the bearing failure? Nice video, great repair. Thanks for posting.
Took the words out of my mouth...they can only take a few inch pounds of side torque cuz they were made by a 10 year Maylaysian kid
my thoughts as well.
me too, it was the belt being too tight
I have seen that before, A tight belt crushes the bearings on a normal alternator too. I saw one where the armature was actually worn because of it. Same fix as this, but way cheaper.
@@toad3048 Oh dear someones not listening to WES today - IT had done 200.000 miles without no one touching it.. Is that long enough ?
2 hour video of you dropping stuff? I would watch that!
Great video as usual. Very informative.
except if he dropped his guts...
am I the only one who lets his videos play to fall asleep? theres nothing wrong with them, I just think the voice is relaxing
Hmm. Probably everyone...
We had Big Ernie doing the safety meetings at work. He could everybody to sleep including even the hardcore insomniac.
My cousin had the same issue on his Opel Tigra, after lots of repairs they just welded the clutch shut and it has worked perfectly since.
Great diagnosis and repair Wes, interesting control method. Well done on getting it done on a weekend.
Thanks for sharing.
Great job explaining the newer style charging systems! I like having the conductance battery analyzer as well as the old time load tester. They are not as cost prohibitive as they once were and Ancel makes a good one.
Any of us probably would have just fired the parts cannon and called it good. Cool to see you go through all the troubleshooting steps.
That would have worked fine in this case!
Good thorough diagnostics. A belt that is too tight will damage bearings. Well done Sir.
That could be an issue on manually tensioned belt systems this engine uses a tensioner with no manual adjustment.
Had the same issue on my wife's van, 230,000 miles. The alternator was charging fine, but the clutch was howling. I threw a rebuilt on & it works fine, nice & quiet.
I did, however, change the belt, idler pulley & tentioner, which came in a kit. Of course, Murphy was there with me, and the locator pin on the tensioner snapped off in the timing cover. It was right next to the frame rail, so I had to drop the engine down about 2 inches to drill out the pin. Still running!
I love the way that you go deeply into everything that you work on. It is very impressive.
Wes I've thoroughly enjoyed your channel and started watching when you were working on the drag line. My grandpa ran one and showed me how when I was a kid. That said it sucks when your own stuff breaks down. Good video.
i would legit watch you change a lightbulb, for sure my fav new channel, never learned so much, thanks for posting as often as you do!!!
alex4alexn That video would likely include a wiring diagram and several comments on LED bulbs vs incandescent. 😂😂😂
Wes, I really admire you dedication, explanations and work ethics. I can follow pretty good on the large equipment, but when you work on a regular car I can barely follow you. That is what I like about your videos. Keep them coming please.
Possible the tight dayco belt contributed to the bearing/clutch failure. You got it right about over priced crap to get that fuel economy to leave you stranded in the end. KISS is the answer. Great video in info Wes, thank you.
My 08 Toyota Tundra alternator did the same thing, even the noise. Took it off and it tested good at the parts store. So I put it back on. 3 days later dead battery again. So I took it off again and replaces it. Worked like a charm.
My Hyundai had generator failure.
I made a new mount and took a regular Bosch generator from a Volvo. I connected it to the battery and then I removed the charge indicator in the dashboard. It has worked perfectly since.
MiH🔔
The idea behind the new pulleys is a good one, just bad that they are a wear item that needs to be replaced as often as you replace your serpentine belt.
I appreciate the old v-belts that didn't have these problems due to normal slippage. The serpentine belts grip too well and wreak havoc on the other parts connected to the pulleys.
I have a VW that the alternator pulley caused the crank timing gear to strip and skip timing. Skipped enough to bend the valves. At first I couldn't figure out why it skipped, thanks to youtube I found the problem after watching several videos.
I would have never guessed that the alternator pulley seizing could cause so much trouble.
Thank you again Wess. My Wife's 06 crv does some strange things. Well I guess it's normal for this over complicated way they do things today. Most noticeable is the heat and ac fan speed. There is a delay of a few seconds when you crank up the fan speed. Also the battery itself is not much bigger than my craftsman lt 1000 riding mower battery. It like if they could they would have used bamboo to save weight building this car. Maybe they did? I've told my wife many a time while I'm working on her crv that her next vehicle is going to be a first gen ford bronco with some appropriate up grades to the brakes steering and suspension and drive train. I can build a whole vehicle from the frame up with all stuff available today. Plus when she's not looking I can steal it and go off roading. Have a great day Wess. Stay warm.
No Wes: you and Andrew do just fine fixing your own stuff. I have no one way sprague clutches on any of mine.
Hi Wes. Yes it is a very common fault on cars here in the UK. Many brands use that kind of pulley
If memory serves me, dodge had the pcm controlled voltage regulator back in the day. I work for a OEM and it’s a simple answer on why stuff gets more complicated. Engineers get paid to design stuff, so they do. Gotta have something for the R&D guys to do.
Engineers design stuff to a purpose and a price. Way too much to do to just redesign crap for no reason. It is always being made better, or cheaper, rarely both...
Thanks for the educational videos. Alternator bad at 200K+ miles not too big of a deal, but the oil consumption issue definitely was. My Tacoma (5VZ-FE 3.4L V6) with 8 more years and 50K+ more miles has had less problems (pinhole leak in radiator and worn out starter). Disappointing to see Toyota's quality has dipped.
You’re an excellent mechanic. Perhaps the new, tight, Dayco belt accelerated the death of the alternator. But 220k miles is pretty damn good anyway. Keep up the good work.
I never replaced a new battery after five years.......probably because i never kept a vehicle for five years! my battery tester is a carbon pile and i agree with you.....you cant beat it....simple and reliable results every time. chrysler uses those decoupling pulleys. i have replaced several alternators. they were not cheap. 225k miles is a good service out of that alternator. my sunday morning started with a river of power steering fluid coming from the steering box on my freightliner....couldnt find that on a sunday morning....
That sounds fun!
This man knows his stuff.. and even on the slight off chance he does make a mistake he owns it and learns from it.. when I first started watching I was skeptical.. but after watching and I mean like beng watching for a few days lol I've learned so many helpful little tips and tricks that I'm sure to use in the future as well.. thank you for sharing your knowledge and skills it's greatly appreciated.. being an automotive tech myself for over 20 years now it's not an easy carrier by any means of the imagination lol.. happy new years to you and yours! Earned a lifetime subscriber here
The clutch mechanism standard for all Toyota engines, It saves the belt and alternator and let's it free spin to help with electrical surges.
Also all alternators are made in Mexico by Denso Electric. Same supplier for GM and Ford. They also have an electric motor manufacturing plant in Tennessee.
Lifetime warranty! They will honor it. I had to warranty my Honda's three times in two years. What a pain in the...
Quick tip just test the alternator. Then check the temperature of the pully if its hotter than the alternator case it's bad. I checked the brushes and they are perfect on the original denso and both the slip ring and the brushes are perfect. All stator connections are brazed on the original denso. You won't find that on a leprechaun zoner reman. Gates 37171p is the decoupler pully.
Back starting in the late 80’s I think, Buick and Cadillac were doing something similar with their alternator as a way of smoothing out idling fluctuations and to improve engine smoothness itself. Around the same time they came out with the DA6 variable displacement ac compressor for the same reason instead of the on/off of the cutch controlled by the low side pressure cycling switch.
Great Channel ! I was out in a small town on a Sunday lost the alternator and it was the clutch. Ended up welding the clutch bearing and putting it back on. Made it home. I should really replace it someday haha.
I had one of those 'overrunning clutches' FALL OFF of VW alternator. Of course, I was 12 hours from home when it happened. Fortunately, the VW dealer understood my predicament and prioritized getting me back on the road.
The free wheeling clutch might be to stop an over-running alternator from pushing the belt-tensioning pulley too much, when you blip the throttle..
Nice video. I looked up the over running pulley. Its purpose is to reduce belt load when the engine suddenly slows.
This is some valuable information. Thanks for passing it along. I never knew about these smart charging systems. I feel as though this is gonna be very useful one day when I need to diagnose one of these new over enginenerded vehicles.
The sprag clutch pulley is new. The ECM controlled alternator has been around for nearly 25 years in Japanese cars.
I think what you saw and heard when alternator was unplugged was an example of Lenz's Law where Eddy currents were being created that magnetically opposed the rotation of the alternator. It's the same type of braking action used in hub dynos, those rides at the fair that drop you then stop at bottom, etc. Probably diodes in the rectifier are stuck.
The overrunning clutch on alt. is NOT for fuel-savings.... it is to reduce the chances of belt coming off. Without overrunning clutch, when engine (crankshaft) DEcellerates quickly, the alternator may have enough torque to pull on the tensionor. This causes slack in the belt between alternator and next pulley. This slack may cause belt to spool off of that pulley. The overrun clutch 'soaks up' any torque from the alt. so it does not pull on the tensionor.
I guess that's one reason. But Toyota used this exact same alternator with a fixed pulley for years...
This a very common issue with the alternator using over driving clutch pulley, freeze or slip, this clutch is very useful for diesel engine for fuel saving and extending alternator and belt life and reduce engine noise as well , otherwise the rotor of the alternator keeping acceleration and deceleration. but it's not quite necessary for gasoline engine.
Is there nothing simple that can't be made unnecessarily complicated in the name of progress?😭
Add some purified water to the battery, I bet those cells are low at this point!
Gotta love those decoupling clutches, they go when they go. They make your belts and alternator last longer though...
Excellent diagnostics and tutorial on the conclusion
I once had the pulley come off entirely while diving. Wallered out the pulley, and it was on a Sunday.
It wasn't noisy, in fact, quietest that engine ever ran. 😁
If your pulley was slipping badly enough to get totally wallowed out, there's no way you can get me to believe that it gave you no warning noises beforehand. You probably just weren't paying attention.
@@MFKR696 I didn't have much warning - I was on a highway at the time, so had to get pulled off. Engine was only turning around 1500 rpm, but the pulley was stamped steel, so it took just seconds to open the hole out.
@@kstricl I'm talking *weeks* beforehand, not just the day it failed, bud. It takes a long time for a problem like that to get that bad, and it would have given you plenty of warning signs if you had only been paying attention. I'm not trying to be mean, but shit like this is why I stay *way* back from the car in front of me on the highway.
I bought a cheap little battery tester, it isn't as good as a carbon load but it gives a pretty good idea on the battery health. It also has a running function where it checks the ripple. This gives you a good idea whether all three legs are working equally. If one leg isn't working due to an open wire or a damaged regulator you should be able to tell.
You're right about that RLO. I didn't even understand how it worked, but I have changed a ton of batteries on imports that have this setup, and that box on the battery regularly falls apart after about ten years or so. I always just bypass it and remove it from the system. I have never replaced one, and I have never had an unhappy customer. It is totally unnecessary.
What a kickass informative video. I would have never known that the ECU is that involved nowadays had I not watched this.
Computers do everything now...
I think the overrun clutch is there because of the closed loop control of the alternator. When the requested output of the alternator is zero, the rotor will spin at engine speed, but due to inertia and zero load, when the engine RPM drops, the alternator will free-spin. The overrun clutch prevents the flywheel energy of the alternator from acting on the engine, causing a negative torque input. For city type driving this could be a significant amount of negative torque over time. I bet the alternator is just wheeling along in stop-and-go traffic and the RLO output has a zero duty when the engine is in coast mode.
Yeah, that seems to be the idea. I guess when the alternator is not charging there is not enough EMF in the field to slow it down as quickly as the engine.
I still really like my old Toyota pickup. I have never seen an American designed vehicle as easy to work on. Oh and it gets 25 mpg with wooden racks for wood hauling.
Those slip clutches are a pain - I've had to do the field modification of jamming the clutch using a couple of self-tapping screws so the alternator would work so we could get home that night.
Clutch on an alternator, who knew. Then again, all my stuff is all from the 90's. Thanks for the video!
Yeah I didn't know that either! Damn. Seems like a good idea until it breaks.
My 2001 MONDEO duratec had one the same set up, like so many other cars have then
m, Its not new Is It then.
@@TUMBLINJEST It is new to me as I only have 90's vehicles from the US. That is all I said. I had to lookup a mondeo duratec as I had never heard of one.
@Richies Restorations I hate car payments. I would drive new. If I did not live in the saltiest place in the usa (MN) I would likely drive much older though.
Those pulleys help to eliminate the whip and lash in the belt as the engine accelerates and deccelerates between each power stroke. They massively reduce wear on other components like the tensioner.
I've also seen a physical demonstration of the difference and it's plain to see, but do agree that it's yet another component to fail and bring a sprag clutch I've seen them do exactly as yours has.
I just don't know. I mean Toyota used this same alternator with a fixed pulley for years...
The whine is usually an indication of a phase being out so alt likely had a bad winding. Noise quit when the field circuit was unplugged.
I usually wait for about 5 seconds before i hit the like button i enjoy every video posted. Very informative and some nice old cool machines to learn about and watch run again.
I just automatically hit it and then watch the video now 8-)
Why wait so long? ;-0)
@@phooesnax sometimes youtubes slow. gotta wait a second or 5 for it to load the page.
Nice video, The wrong Blet was the failure of your Alternator. gotta say that had a battery issue with an Autozone battery and they tested it and replaced it for me, the battery was 1 month old, my guess it was the one bad you get in the batch but the guy took 5 mins to replace it in my car with a happy face and attitude, I'm in MA and it was 52f that day, I try giving him a tip and he said no, I put it in his shirt pocket anyways.
A little tip for you. Never apply dielectric grease to the mating surfaces. You can apply it after you install the wire. Dielectric means it does not conduct electricity. Cool video!
Ah the power of internet myths. I've done it thousands of times... This guy does some pretty simple testing to show that dielectric grease in no way will hinder an electrical connection.
Watch Wes Work this why I rarely comment on TH-cam.
@@KeepingitAnalog Well you need something to back up your claim, because my experience does not jive with your comment.
Watch Wes Work my claim? It’s not a claim. Before the internet was cool dielectric was and still is dielectric grease. Perhaps you should study what the fuck dielectric means.
You said doody! Lol! $100 for over running clutch or $200-$300 for complete unit. Better for complete unit, since like you said, might still be some internal issues we don’t know about...make sure you keep the bill so you can try out warranty in another 200,000 miles.
It was enjoyable to see you work again Wes🛠
This just popped up in my favorites and it’s the exact noise I tried troubleshooting on my daughter’s Camry yesterday! Sometimes the big brother algorithms ain’t that bad. 😀 Thanks Wes!
Gone are the days when you could just disconnect the batterie and say "Yep that alt is bad"
Yeah that probably won't work on this rig...
if I did that idk what my BMW would do. I know it goes into self preservation mode and turns all your shit off. no radio, heated seats, air. It goes into shock and gives the motor the last bit of power when the alternator dies. Ask me how I know. Its also to smart for its own good. If it detects the battery voltage drop to low it thinks the battery is DONE so it stops charging so it doesn't blow up and start a fire. Thing is I have an old BMW with an old battery that isn't driven often. It also has the upgraded alarm system so it has tilt sensors and motion detection inside the cabin so there's a constant drain when locked. After a few days of this and being winter in Illinois. She will start but the volts drop hard and the car freaks and starts turning stuff off and wont charge the battery. Its to smart for its own good. The second you give it a jump pack for just the startup its golden. Like nothing ever happened. I just leave it on the battery maintainer when not in use and no more problems.
The previous belt that was too tight probably contributed to the bearings early demise
The tensioner has a constant tension, so I doubt that. More likely corrosion from all the salt...
Fun. They used them there clutch pulleys on Officer Friendlies' Crown Vic forever. Always thought they were there to keep the belt from squeaking with a sudden RPM drop, and to prevent stress on the belt, etc.
I think that's part of the reason. But I believe there is supposed to be a small efficiency gain. The alternator will actually coast up to 10 second from 2000 RPM.
I noticed right after I got my 2019 Silverado that the volt meter would jump between 11 and 14 seemingly randomly. Did a little research and found out that "they all do that". ECM tells the alternator when to charge basically. All to save a few ounces of fuel here and there. I also question the reliability of all this new electronic wizardry. It's all fun and cool when new. But get 5 or 10 years down the road and we'll see how reliable (and expensive) all this is. Sad part is that it takes a lot of DIYers including me out of the game. Like you said, "It's not your grandfather's alternator".
Those over-running clutches are prone to seizing. My 2018 XLE Rav4 is making noise at the alternator.
My RAV4 (2009) alternator gave out exactly the same way. I was an hour from home. Same whining sound. Had to have my daughter drive out to rescue the Dog and I.
My tundra with smart charge and regular pulley has a "alternator sense" fuse that will case communication loss to the ecu and charge at full output, with battery light. My altima with an overrunning clutch just has an alternator fuse and will full charge without a battery light when that fuse is removed. Seems like the alternator circuit in the fuse box is usually for sending battery voltage to the ecm.
GM vehicles have a current sensor too, but just a standard alternator. They must do some PWM on the field to dial back the charging system. I believe it also helps to avoid over charging the battery. Once it's recovered from starting the vehicle it really doesn't need many amps shoved into it anymore. Just enough to balance any loads on the cars system.
Hey Wes, Happy New Year. You’re a good repair, rebuild, and diagnostic man. Also I would ad, a great teacher!
Yes, you’re teaching on the channel, thats why I watch.
Hope you find time this year to return to the old Insley Dragline and find remainder of boom & bucket...very interesting.
I think it has been mentioned already, but the overrunning clutch is there not for fuel economy but to reduce belt vibrations and to allow the alternator to coast to a stop so the belt doesn't squeak and to reduce abrupt loads on the alternator. These issues are more pronounced on diesels - my A4 chassis Golf TDIs have the clutched alternator and when they fail you usually either don't charge due to it slipping or they will make a bad noise when the engine is shut off. Occasionally the entire sheave will depart the rest of the pulley, which is interesting.
This shows pretty positively the difference between a solid pulley, a one-way clutch, and a clutch and damper combo. th-cam.com/video/9beaAjKLBnY/w-d-xo.html
Clutch is there so that engine pulley dampening is not such an issue. Belt and tensioner, and dampener are not so stressed. Has nothing to do with fuel economy.
I would not be happy with the charging voltage at all. 13.2 to 14.0 is ideally where you want to be. New ‘smart’ alternators are a tad more difficult to deal with and ideally need to be on a proper test rig. The engine ECU monitors battery charging and if the battery is within preset tolerances it will de-activate the alternator field supply and stop charging. The overrun clutch simply stops the engine having to rotate the mass of the stator unnecessarily. They often seize up or fail completely and loose drive. All just one of the many minute tweaks to eke out a slither more efficiency.
I managed to score a pulley clutch OEM Toyota for $5. I'm not sure how everyone was asking $100. I figured it's worth the try at that point. I'm 100% certain the clutch is going bad I have had another alternator fail in a similar fashion. So as soon as I started detecting the early signs I started shopping around for a solution as I knew I had a little time. There is no battery light yet. Hopefully it fixes it up because 300 or more is a lot more than 5.
Why the hell does an alternator need a one way clutch??? When is the engine ever gonna try to run backwards?? These aren't Detroit 2 strokes...
Its for saving the alternator and beltpully especially on diesel engines at idle
@@johanlundin5874 I thought it was just to keep them from chirping the belt when shut off. We had alternators on diesels for 40 years with no clutches and they held up just fine.
@@bcbloc02 I've changed 2 clutches, on on a Vw Passat diesel an a Citroen C5 diesel, and both tensioner jumped like crazy on idle
bcbloc02 Bailey would not approve that design.
@@yqwgjsg Could be why Baily pees on it. LOL
Thanks for posting. I don't have any vehicles new enough for this complex system but I often have to diagnose newer vehicles for friends or relatives and this information is very helpful
Kinda funny, what you mentioned about the battery cables. I used to do just smaller residential plumbing, then a little over a year ago I bought an old abandoned school to turn into a home. Everything is larger. Now when I pick up a piece of 1/2" copper pipe, it looks like a little pencil.
You're right about the battery testing tool, you must put an actual load on the battery, it's the only way you can be sure if it's good or not
Wes, youre supposed to put the dielectric grease onto the tightened connection. Not in between the connection! As you said: It dielectric, so its got isolating properties. The purpose of that grease is to keep away oxygen and water. And not isolate the two contacts from each other. Same with batteries btw. Apply the grease after you installed the poleclamp and dont put it inbetween the clamp and the battery pole. And with plugs. Apply the grease around the outside of the plug, not directly onto the contacts.
It may work the way you did it, but you definitely introduced a bit of resistance on this contact which wont help the charging system at all.
Thanks for this awesome video, tho.
No. It's a myth that dielectric grease will increase resistance. The "dielectric" part mean that it does not form conductive carbon if burn by an electrical arc, which could happen with petroleum based grease. There are many TH-cam videos debunking this myth.
@@WatchWesWork I suggest you to read whats written on the packaging of that grease. Itll say the same as I did.
Btw if you buy a new car, the battery poles will be treated exactly like I told you. Sprayed with dielectric grease after the pole clamp was tighened down.
But hey, that was just a well meant tip. Of course youre free to do it as you want.
Yep common problem now, Auto Sparky 25 years, it is supposed to prolong the belt life I think or some rubbish, Changed mine out the other day as part of a 280000km service on my 2012 Hilux
I've seen engines that die because of alternator pulley. With certain Volvo diesel engines those pulleys fail and cause that serpentine belt to snap, those belt pieces go into timing belt case and you can guess the rest.
That sounds fun!
11:37 maybe the crazy tight belt expedited the death of the alternator?
The tensioner was working okay, so the belt wouldn't have been too tight when installed. He just thought it was a bit shorter than spec.
Ford crown Vic’s 05+ have a clutch in alternator too that go out. Usually squeal when slipping
Love that old school tester. Put that old school tester on the battery and make that alternator work to whatever amp you want but don't cook it.
That's an old school way of thinking about the load tester, to be honest I thought the same way until it started causing road calls for batteries, batteries that tested good with a carbon pile load tester, tested as bad with the conductance type tester, so the carbon pile tester now sits in the tool crib, a carbo load tester can't test for a cell that's shorted or has a problem where a conductance tester can, think of it like testing a ignition coil with a multi meter, or a scope, both work but the scope provides you with a better picture of what's going on, 1 tech to another, after 29 years in the heavy duty diesel trade, sometimes it's hard to except the newer technology
I use walmart batterys in all my equipment. I have a lawn mower with a walmart battery - 7 years old. It is still good. in my truck is 6 years old
There are really only 3 battery builders in North America. No matter where you buy it, it will be made by Exide, Deka, or Johnson Controls.
Project Farm's battery test says you are wise. The Walmart EverStart's scored highest and best value iirc.
Walmart batteries are manufactured by Exide...
The pulley helps the engine wind down quicker rather then running out. Less rotational resistance
Great video once again. Thanks for explanation of amp clamp in comments . By the way, my local walmart sells stainless steel zip ties. They seem to have less fatigue failure in areas of high vibration compared to the nylon type. I was shocked to find them there. Thank you.
I have had VERY poor luck with run-of-the-mill reman alternators. Although they carry very good warantee.... it is MY TIME which is spent constantly replacing when they crap out. I hope you have better luck with yours. I prefer a scrapyard OEM alternator to cheep reman.
Yeah, and it's not consistent. I normally get my alternators and starters from a local auto electric shop. It's all they do. But they are not open on Sunday, and we don't have a spare vehicle.
An 'old wives tale' that happens to be true is leaving batteries on concrete will discharge and help destroy the battery. Charging a battery while it is on concrete is less effective than putting the battery on wood.
I don't know the scientific reasoning, but I do know it makes a significant difference. Take two charged batteries. Put one on wood and the other on concrete. In two days there will be a significant difference in the stored voltage.
Good call on the alternator. Never saw a sprag clutch on an alternator, so again you taught me something.
Thanks for sharing.
Nissan use the same setup on Thier alternators....crazy..
Cars fixed so happy wife...happy life!🍺🍺
I believe your Toyota like all modern cars, at least that I'm aware of use a duty cycle charging method controlled by the ECM or a module, I don't know what advantage if any the freewheel pulley provides
just put alternator in my Sebring . Sounded like a bag of marbles in the engine . Figured sure as hell if i only replaced the pulley it would stop charging in a week . new pulley was 80 bucks and reman Mopar alternator was only 125 . Quite common noise on older Dodge Caravan also ,
Pro tip, go to tractor supply take a picture of their 2 year warranty battery labels and prices. Around me they are $30 cheaper at trac supply than Autozone and Autozone price matches the identical item and if it has the same or better warranty
Also reman alternators or starters from the zone are always hit or miss. But with the lifetime warranty if you wanna get the new one later or it’s not that hard to replace then just keep swapping them in but new ones almost never have issues with they are usually almost worth the money if you have it
9:40 oh you might just need it haha
Yes I have worked at Autozone on the side for over a year now.
the amps you mesured the first time were the amps pulled by the lights and drawn from the battery, not the amps delivered by the alternator... at the end off the video you mesured right, it was indeed the pulley.
So technically it doesn't matter. I was measuring total amperage of the system. The alternator was keeping up with the lights and still giving 20 amps to charge the battery.
The way that alternator was whining, it sure sounds like either a shorted diode, or winding.
New Jersey Bill 100% what I thought, been an automotive electrician for 30 years and never heard a clutch pulley make that noise 🤔
I don't know. The alternator seemed to have plenty of output.
That alternator was lacking on voltage. Unloaded they should produce 13.5-14 volts, fully loaded they should still produce over 13 volts. Anything less and you have a failing alternator. Hence why the battery light would come on and shut off. Output is never measured in amps on all newer electronics, it's not neccessary. You can have amperage but be lacking voltage. Amperage is the flow of electrons, voltage is makes then move, and ohms is the resistance to flow. Think of a garden hose, amperage being the flow of water, and voltage being the pressure needed to make the water move, and ohms being a restriction in the hose. You open the nozzle on the end of the hose and get nothing. You know there's water (amperage), but there's either not enough pressure or no pressure (volts) to make it move, and that's assuming there's no resistance or at least nothing out of spec. Now for your battery cable's, they are actually more efficient that the big cables your used to seeing. The finer the individual strands that make up the wire, the current it can actually handle because there's more surface area. I would rather have battery cables made with lots of fine strands of wire over, battery cables made with just a few large strands of wire.
Wonder if the overly tight belt was the straw that broke the camel's back?
I don't know.
Dodge avenger 2010-??? Same thing happened to me !! First time I came across a "over run pulley"
I ended up buying a whole new unit. You can buy a non- over run unit from a Dodge van I believe to eliminate this but don't quote me. It's going strong.....for now.
Well......the big BMW alternators are sealed and they are coolant cooled. There are so many electric powered gizmos on board that the engineers went for squeezing as much juice out of the alternator and not letting a drop go to waste, all overlooked by the ECM. And in case of replacement, all new alternators have to be programmed to the chassis/VIN number or else it won't work.
But, as we speak, the latest technology buzz are the fully electric cars (and buses, trucks,motor cycles). I got to drive one recently (a Nissan Leaf) and I am convinced of their performance. No alternators, exhaust system, pistons, valves etc.
Yeah. It's coming.
Wife definitely needs her car and you fixed it