- This topic has 9 replies, 6 voices, and was last updated 10 years, 1 month ago by .
-
Topic
-
Hey all,
This post is about my: 2004 dodge stratus SE, 2.4L DOHC PZEV
When I got to work today, I smelled burning plastic. I opened my hood and found that the plastic cover that protects the B+ terminal connection on my alternator had started melting into the terminal (on the alternator). The stud on the alternator was black/charred and the nut looked like it started to melt. Note, it didn’t actually catch on fire. I have my tools with me and a spare alternator at home, but I ran some tests once I got to work (I had my battery tester and DVOM with me).
The battery tested good (at 568 CCA out of 700), and the voltage was steady at 12.41 volts after getting rid of the surface charge. It’s a duralast gold that’s less than a year old.
I did a diode test on the alternator, but I don’t think there is a diode in this alternator (it’s externally regulated inside the ECU). If it matters, my dvom told me it was an open circut (on the diode test, which consisted of putting the + of my dvom onto the b+ stud while I put the – to ground on the alternator.
Also, I have a charging system circut diagram (from my FSM), and I checked all of the relevant grounds and fuses (all were fine). Here is the diagram if you care to look:
I also tested the voltage while running, and the system was charging at around 14.4V at idle (750 RPM). Is it just me, or does that seem high? The car otherwise runs fine.
I may just throw my spare alternator for now, but any idea what would cause this?
Thanks!
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.