Hi folks, new(ish) owner and first time poster here.
I've only put about 600~700 miles on our coach since I bought it from Tom Hampton in April. Lately I'd been noticing the "GEN" light had been glowing
dimly. Reviewing this forum I decided I'd try installing an APC (haven't ordered it yet). As it happened, I had the coach back at Tom's shop last
week for shock replacement and while I was there I described the situation to him. I also mentioned that the week prior I had found the engine battery
completely dead. Using the "BAT BOOST" toggle wasn't enough to crank it over either, but you could hear that it was trying to engage the starter at
least. I recharged the engine battery with a trickle charger and that seemed to resolve it.
With a multimeter Tom confirmed alternator output around 13.6V and with engine off, battery was 12.7V so all ok. Then on the drive home the GEN light
came on full bright. I confirmed at the center isolator post that alternator output was only about 1V and the battery was draining below 12V. Strange
timing for this to happen, I though.
I removed the alternator and found it was an AutoZone Duralast reman unit (lifetime warranty). AutoZone gave me a replacement and I installed it last
night. All was great as I compared my new voltage numbers to the ones shown on the flowchart elsewhere on this forum. I drove for about 1/2 hour and
checked again (still good), then left it running with all exterior lights on for about 15 minutes while I adjusted a fog light. When I went back
inside I saw the GEN light was back on again! I quickly checked voltages and saw the alternator was now up to 18V at the center isolator post and
voltage at the engine battery posts was falling (still above 12V). I shut it off and walked away for the night completely disgusted. I'm guessing the
high voltage is from a bad regulator, but isn't that part of the alternator assembly internally? Is there something killing these alternators or
could I just have gotten a "bad" one from AutoZone?
Any wisdom here would be greatly appreciated! I should also mention that I took the engine battery (a newer looking Deka brand) to my local battery
shop and they said it checks out OK. I've also confirmed my negative battery cable grounds to the engine block.
--
1975 Glenbrook 26'
I've only put about 600~700 miles on our coach since I bought it from Tom Hampton in April. Lately I'd been noticing the "GEN" light had been glowing
dimly. Reviewing this forum I decided I'd try installing an APC (haven't ordered it yet). As it happened, I had the coach back at Tom's shop last
week for shock replacement and while I was there I described the situation to him. I also mentioned that the week prior I had found the engine battery
completely dead. Using the "BAT BOOST" toggle wasn't enough to crank it over either, but you could hear that it was trying to engage the starter at
least. I recharged the engine battery with a trickle charger and that seemed to resolve it.
With a multimeter Tom confirmed alternator output around 13.6V and with engine off, battery was 12.7V so all ok. Then on the drive home the GEN light
came on full bright. I confirmed at the center isolator post that alternator output was only about 1V and the battery was draining below 12V. Strange
timing for this to happen, I though.
I removed the alternator and found it was an AutoZone Duralast reman unit (lifetime warranty). AutoZone gave me a replacement and I installed it last
night. All was great as I compared my new voltage numbers to the ones shown on the flowchart elsewhere on this forum. I drove for about 1/2 hour and
checked again (still good), then left it running with all exterior lights on for about 15 minutes while I adjusted a fog light. When I went back
inside I saw the GEN light was back on again! I quickly checked voltages and saw the alternator was now up to 18V at the center isolator post and
voltage at the engine battery posts was falling (still above 12V). I shut it off and walked away for the night completely disgusted. I'm guessing the
high voltage is from a bad regulator, but isn't that part of the alternator assembly internally? Is there something killing these alternators or
could I just have gotten a "bad" one from AutoZone?
Any wisdom here would be greatly appreciated! I should also mention that I took the engine battery (a newer looking Deka brand) to my local battery
shop and they said it checks out OK. I've also confirmed my negative battery cable grounds to the engine block.
--
1975 Glenbrook 26'