HoseHead wrote:Test your voltage regulator. Put a volt meter across the battery with the car off. Should read 12VDC or slightly higher if car was just running. Start the car. Measure across the battery again. It should now be reading as hgh as 13.8 VDC - Alternator/votlage regulator are now charging the battery and providing voltage for the entire car. If the "running" voltage is higher than 13.8 VDC, then your regulator is not regulating and your experiencing voltage runaway. Get back to us with your results.
Without a regulator, your alternator will charge with increasing voltage until your battery eventually blows up. With the high voltages, the battery will become quite warm to the touch, but it also very dangerous to be around one in this condition. You may also be able to hear the battery acid "boiling". You may also be able to smell "rotten eggs" with an overcharged battery. Sulphuric acid explosions are not pretty. Be careful.
Bruce
Umm, I REGULARLY measure up to 14.4 on a charging system, especially when cold. 13.8 is generally the accepted minium for a healthy charging charging system, between this and 14.4 is where you want to be.
You will have to measure actual voltage to find out what is going on. I usually use the cigarette light, for a quick connection point if I need to use a DMM to monitor while driving, not as accurate as an ignition whire or batter feed to the fuse panel, but it's quick and clean.
A weak battery could show something like this, but is unlikely the cause.
Solution, get more amos for a higher current draw, so that the voltage doesn't spike as high.
