Charging ciruit problems - can someone check my logic?

Charging ciruit problems - can someone check my logic?

Author
Discussion

Thud_Mcguffin

Original Poster:

267 posts

210 months

Thursday 31st May 2012
quotequote all
I have been having problems with my 1999 Elise, 1.8L K series engine. Basically the previous alternator failed and when I replaced it with a new one, the alternator is running very hot to the point of smoking. The car has a -ve earth and the alternator is earthed via the engine casing.

My assumption is that there is a short circuit somewhere because of the following :
1. I disconnected both battery terminals
2. using an ohm meter I found there was continuity between the alternator positive output terminal and the alternator casing itself (earth).
3. When I disconnect the alternator cables the continuity goes away, so I assume the short if not internal to the alternator.

Before I spend a significant time trying to find the open circuit. Can someone confirm that I should not be seeing continuity between the alternator output and ground when the battery is disconnected?

Mr2Mike

20,143 posts

262 months

Thursday 31st May 2012
quotequote all
Thud_Mcguffin said:
I have been having problems with my 1999 Elise, 1.8L K series engine. Basically the previous alternator failed and when I replaced it with a new one, the alternator is running very hot to the point of smoking. The car has a -ve earth and the alternator is earthed via the engine casing.

My assumption is that there is a short circuit somewhere because of the following :
1. I disconnected both battery terminals
2. using an ohm meter I found there was continuity between the alternator positive output terminal and the alternator casing itself (earth).
3. When I disconnect the alternator cables the continuity goes away, so I assume the short if not internal to the alternator.

Before I spend a significant time trying to find the open circuit. Can someone confirm that I should not be seeing continuity between the alternator output and ground when the battery is disconnected?
When you say continuity, are you seeing a dead short (i.e. close to zero ohms) or is it a significant resistance? If the latter than it's likely fine. If there was a short between the alternator output and ground I would expect to see lots of sparks and smoke when you connected the battery.

Thud_Mcguffin

Original Poster:

267 posts

210 months

Thursday 31st May 2012
quotequote all
Thanks. The ohms readings are a bit variable but are usually from 0 to 5. I take your point about also shorting the battery out, I don't see anything unusual when the battery is connected.

Is there anything else I should be checking which could be causing a hot (new) alternator?

PaulKemp

979 posts

152 months

Friday 1st June 2012
quotequote all
Plastic car earth problems.
I would run an earth from alternator body to battery -V and see if this helps

paintman

7,765 posts

197 months

Sunday 3rd June 2012
quotequote all
Not just plastic cars, earth straps & their mounting points are rarely checked & the straps can corrode to nothing inside the plastic covering.
Current then tries alternative routes & has been known to weld handbrake inner cables to the outer - with the attendant fire riskeek

radical78

398 posts

151 months

Monday 11th June 2012
quotequote all
youve missed or lost the insulator under the alternator positive

radical78

398 posts

151 months

Monday 11th June 2012
quotequote all
youve missed or lost the insulator under the alternator positive