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Just got home, into my garage clothes, and out to test the generator. First, I checked the connections, making sure all were good, and started the car. (As an aside, the more days in a row I start it, the easier it is starting.) Ignition light stayed on. So on to the first test in the manual:
Remove both leads from the generator, jump the 2 terminal posts together, and hook up a volt meter from the posts to ground. Start car, watch voltage with engine running. Should move up gradually and be of a good charging voltage.
My voltage was about .5 volts. Moved a bit with engine speed, and even went down at one point when RPM went up (?).
So I pulled the generator out. Now I'm not quite sure how I should proceed. Is there more testing that can be done without disassembling the generator? It looks like I need some sort of thin wrench to hold the pulley still while I remove it--don't have that sort of tool handy. I'd like to try and fix it myself, as a learning process, rather than just hand it over to be rebuilt.
What do I do next?
-Drew
Remove both leads from the generator, jump the 2 terminal posts together, and hook up a volt meter from the posts to ground. Start car, watch voltage with engine running. Should move up gradually and be of a good charging voltage.
My voltage was about .5 volts. Moved a bit with engine speed, and even went down at one point when RPM went up (?).
So I pulled the generator out. Now I'm not quite sure how I should proceed. Is there more testing that can be done without disassembling the generator? It looks like I need some sort of thin wrench to hold the pulley still while I remove it--don't have that sort of tool handy. I'd like to try and fix it myself, as a learning process, rather than just hand it over to be rebuilt.
What do I do next?
-Drew