Slow but steady progress...electrical stuff (i hate it!)
- vwfye
- Posts: 1010
- Joined: Sun May 21, 2000 12:01 am
Slow but steady progress...electrical stuff (i hate it!)
I have a continual charge light on the dash of the 412. so, i started with the basics (less my meter as it is still packed from the move). i replaced a suspect/corroded postive terminal on the cable. checked the tranny ground and the negative ground on the battery to body. pulled the VR for a new one and no change. So, I guess it is time to pull the alternator.
Do I understand correctly that it is easier to drop the exhaust to remove the alt than trying to work around it? Also, is this a rebuildable unit for a novice?
Do I understand correctly that it is easier to drop the exhaust to remove the alt than trying to work around it? Also, is this a rebuildable unit for a novice?
Notchback mid-engine speedster
Little Giant Killer 3
Little Giant Killer 3
- raygreenwood
- Posts: 11912
- Joined: Wed Jan 22, 2003 12:01 am
I don't think the alternator is any easier or harder than any other. Generally, I think the lack of bearings, diodes, slip rings etc....available to work with this alternator, may discourage you.
These are very high quality builds. I have yet to have one last less than 250K miles.
Before taking the alternator out....other things to check.
Check the ground strap at the nose cone of the transmission. Check the T-1 connectors (black, gray and blue) near the VR. Check the large red and white wire that goes into the alternator loom for corrosion.
Also....check the light in the dash itself. It may be a ground issue. Also...do you mean the light on the right hand instrument...or the light on the "B" indicator between the instruments. Generally...though that is for brakes, on some early models....it also would light up with the alt. light as the ground failed to the instrument panel. Ray
These are very high quality builds. I have yet to have one last less than 250K miles.
Before taking the alternator out....other things to check.
Check the ground strap at the nose cone of the transmission. Check the T-1 connectors (black, gray and blue) near the VR. Check the large red and white wire that goes into the alternator loom for corrosion.
Also....check the light in the dash itself. It may be a ground issue. Also...do you mean the light on the right hand instrument...or the light on the "B" indicator between the instruments. Generally...though that is for brakes, on some early models....it also would light up with the alt. light as the ground failed to the instrument panel. Ray
- vwfye
- Posts: 1010
- Joined: Sun May 21, 2000 12:01 am
i have already checked the ground straps, the red/white wire and it is the correct dash light.
the car sat for 10 years and who knows what has crawled inside the alternator in that time. all i know is the dash light won't go out (battery shape inside the right gauge) and the battery gets drained from the vehicle running.
the car sat for 10 years and who knows what has crawled inside the alternator in that time. all i know is the dash light won't go out (battery shape inside the right gauge) and the battery gets drained from the vehicle running.
Notchback mid-engine speedster
Little Giant Killer 3
Little Giant Killer 3
- MGVWfan
- Posts: 825
- Joined: Fri Jun 11, 2004 9:23 pm
Given that you've replaced the regulator (assuming the new one is good), the only way for the alt lamp to stay lit when running is either something's grounding it (pull the connector to the regulator to break the field's ground, turn on the ignition, and the lamp should not light if all is well with the lamp circuit), or for the alternator to have a bad field circuit (brushes, slip rings, field winding, wiring), ground diode set, or exciter diode trio. Too bad.
It's a Bosch AL75X rebuilt...here's one source...
https://pointer.webappcabaret.net/busde ... dgroup=595
Can't beat $99 for a real Bosch rebuilt, even the falls-apart-on-the-way-home auto parts chain cheapies are something like $50 around here.
Both bearings were toast on mine, but the brushes, etc. were OK, so I replaced the bearings and pressed on. Ray's correct, it's impossible to find brushes and diodes without a friend in the auto electrical rebuilding business...and even then, the price for a set of diodes exceeds the price of a rebuilt alternator. The brushes were something like $40 for a pair, outrageous.
It's a Bosch AL75X rebuilt...here's one source...
https://pointer.webappcabaret.net/busde ... dgroup=595
Can't beat $99 for a real Bosch rebuilt, even the falls-apart-on-the-way-home auto parts chain cheapies are something like $50 around here.
Both bearings were toast on mine, but the brushes, etc. were OK, so I replaced the bearings and pressed on. Ray's correct, it's impossible to find brushes and diodes without a friend in the auto electrical rebuilding business...and even then, the price for a set of diodes exceeds the price of a rebuilt alternator. The brushes were something like $40 for a pair, outrageous.
Last edited by MGVWfan on Tue May 17, 2005 6:19 pm, edited 3 times in total.
Lane
73 VW 412 (the Nomad, dropped valve seat land now, argh!)
67 MGB (Abingdon's Finest)
76 Plymouth Duster /6 (runs like a top)
99 New Beetle 2.0 (never gives any trouble)
04 Golf TDI (45 MPG)
09 JSW (love it, love it, love it!)
73 VW 412 (the Nomad, dropped valve seat land now, argh!)
67 MGB (Abingdon's Finest)
76 Plymouth Duster /6 (runs like a top)
99 New Beetle 2.0 (never gives any trouble)
04 Golf TDI (45 MPG)
09 JSW (love it, love it, love it!)
- MGVWfan
- Posts: 825
- Joined: Fri Jun 11, 2004 9:23 pm
I've been told a long flat file used carefully is good for dressing up the exhaust manifold flange tops...sounds right to me. DB/Ray?
Lane
73 VW 412 (the Nomad, dropped valve seat land now, argh!)
67 MGB (Abingdon's Finest)
76 Plymouth Duster /6 (runs like a top)
99 New Beetle 2.0 (never gives any trouble)
04 Golf TDI (45 MPG)
09 JSW (love it, love it, love it!)
73 VW 412 (the Nomad, dropped valve seat land now, argh!)
67 MGB (Abingdon's Finest)
76 Plymouth Duster /6 (runs like a top)
99 New Beetle 2.0 (never gives any trouble)
04 Golf TDI (45 MPG)
09 JSW (love it, love it, love it!)
- DeathBus
- Posts: 1176
- Joined: Mon Sep 30, 2002 1:01 am
- MGVWfan
- Posts: 825
- Joined: Fri Jun 11, 2004 9:23 pm
Hey, that's my old trick, using Redneck Blue (Marks-A-Lot) like that! Cheaper than Prussian Blue, eh?
Lane
73 VW 412 (the Nomad, dropped valve seat land now, argh!)
67 MGB (Abingdon's Finest)
76 Plymouth Duster /6 (runs like a top)
99 New Beetle 2.0 (never gives any trouble)
04 Golf TDI (45 MPG)
09 JSW (love it, love it, love it!)
73 VW 412 (the Nomad, dropped valve seat land now, argh!)
67 MGB (Abingdon's Finest)
76 Plymouth Duster /6 (runs like a top)
99 New Beetle 2.0 (never gives any trouble)
04 Golf TDI (45 MPG)
09 JSW (love it, love it, love it!)
- vwfye
- Posts: 1010
- Joined: Sun May 21, 2000 12:01 am
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albert
- Posts: 834
- Joined: Mon Mar 22, 2004 2:08 pm
slow but steady
allo, vwfye, it is not necessaire to reemove the heather box for joint the alt. only the muffler and steel cover plate very fast , ,,albert
- vwfye
- Posts: 1010
- Joined: Sun May 21, 2000 12:01 am
update... and frustration!
Upon vehicle start, the voltage at the battery climbs to just over 13v... but, the charge light doesn't go out and the battery discharges as the vehicle runs... the battery checks out as good, but i am having my suspisions. if the charging system is functioning but the battery has an issue, would this cause the charging light to stay on? it seems like (to my simple mind) that if the circuit is complete, the circuit is compete and the light should go out.
as stated before, i checked grounding straps at ground, replaced a corroded cable, inserted a NEW vr into the mix and next is an alternator if need be.
Upon vehicle start, the voltage at the battery climbs to just over 13v... but, the charge light doesn't go out and the battery discharges as the vehicle runs... the battery checks out as good, but i am having my suspisions. if the charging system is functioning but the battery has an issue, would this cause the charging light to stay on? it seems like (to my simple mind) that if the circuit is complete, the circuit is compete and the light should go out.
as stated before, i checked grounding straps at ground, replaced a corroded cable, inserted a NEW vr into the mix and next is an alternator if need be.
Notchback mid-engine speedster
Little Giant Killer 3
Little Giant Killer 3
- MGVWfan
- Posts: 825
- Joined: Fri Jun 11, 2004 9:23 pm
Concur.
Long answer...
The charge lamp staying lit tells you that one side of the lamp has +12V from the battery, and the other side is grounded through the field and regulator, indicating the exciter diode trio isn't producing any juice for whatever reason. All the reasons why the trio isn't providing juice mean an alternator pull and replacement (bad trio, bad negative rectifier diodes, bad field winding, bad slip rings, bad brushes).
Long answer...
The charge lamp staying lit tells you that one side of the lamp has +12V from the battery, and the other side is grounded through the field and regulator, indicating the exciter diode trio isn't producing any juice for whatever reason. All the reasons why the trio isn't providing juice mean an alternator pull and replacement (bad trio, bad negative rectifier diodes, bad field winding, bad slip rings, bad brushes).
Lane
73 VW 412 (the Nomad, dropped valve seat land now, argh!)
67 MGB (Abingdon's Finest)
76 Plymouth Duster /6 (runs like a top)
99 New Beetle 2.0 (never gives any trouble)
04 Golf TDI (45 MPG)
09 JSW (love it, love it, love it!)
73 VW 412 (the Nomad, dropped valve seat land now, argh!)
67 MGB (Abingdon's Finest)
76 Plymouth Duster /6 (runs like a top)
99 New Beetle 2.0 (never gives any trouble)
04 Golf TDI (45 MPG)
09 JSW (love it, love it, love it!)