Doug Sabbag
Freshman Member

Offline
Hi guys,
I have a 1969 Triumph TR6.
I have been installing a new front wiring harness and while doing that, at one point I hooked up the battery to wire up the ammeter to start the car and I had the brown & white wire on the connector which the solid brown wire was on.
Sparks flew and the alternator was blown.
After I installed a new alternator, I'm seeing no movement of the ammeter needle and reading just under 12 volts on the battery.
So, the alternator isn't charging the battery.
So, apparently I blew out the ammeter too, and without that, the alternator output isn't getting to the battery.
So... I'm wondering if I can temporarily bypass the ammeter so the alternator will charge the battery?
I'm afraid to run a wire connecting both ammeter terminals, because I don't want to blow another alternator.
Is there anything I can do until I get a new ammeter?
Help sure will be appreciated!
Thank you,
Doug
I have a 1969 Triumph TR6.
I have been installing a new front wiring harness and while doing that, at one point I hooked up the battery to wire up the ammeter to start the car and I had the brown & white wire on the connector which the solid brown wire was on.
Sparks flew and the alternator was blown.
After I installed a new alternator, I'm seeing no movement of the ammeter needle and reading just under 12 volts on the battery.
So, the alternator isn't charging the battery.
So, apparently I blew out the ammeter too, and without that, the alternator output isn't getting to the battery.
So... I'm wondering if I can temporarily bypass the ammeter so the alternator will charge the battery?
I'm afraid to run a wire connecting both ammeter terminals, because I don't want to blow another alternator.
Is there anything I can do until I get a new ammeter?
Help sure will be appreciated!
Thank you,
Doug