Fuse-eating alternator...
Posted: Sun Oct 04, 2009 11:36 am
First off thanks, spiffyguido for answering my first post with alternator questions. So here's where I'm at now:
I just replaced the alternator in my 1989 Honda Prelude and now every time I reconnect my negative battery cable, I blow my main (70A) fuse. It's happened two times in a row.
Some background: My alternator burned out and stopped working about two weeks ago, but even before that, A mysterious drain appeared in my electrical system, causing my battery to go dead if I DIDN'T drive the car.
For example, If I drove it every day, it was fine, but if I skipped a day, the battery would be too drained out to turn the vehicle over. If I skipped two days the battery would barely light up the instrument panel.
So about two weeks ago, after the alternator left me stranded on the highway, I resorted to desperate measures.
I still needed the car to get to work, and I discovered that I could run it off the battery alone if I was careful, so I disconnected the alternator wires and started carrying around a second battery and a bench charger.
I would charge both batteries up, use one to get to work, then switch to the other for the ride home.
Somewhere along the line the unplugged 4-terminal plug that connects to the alternator touched the hot exhaust manifold and became a melted ruined mess.
When I installed the new alternator I worked around this by just cutting the ruined plug off and terminating each individual wire with a female spade connector the right size to slide onto the contacts inside the socket on the alternator.
I was Very Careful to make sure each wire was connected to the proper terminal in that socket, and double checked before attempting to start.
Besides the 4-terminal plug, there is also a single wire connection to the alternator, using a ring terminal held on with a nut. I believe it's the ground. I've isolated the problem to here.
The first time I blew my main fuse, this single wire was the only connection between the new alternator and the vehicle's systems.
This was actually left connected by mistake, but when I tried to reconnect the negative battery cable there was a big fat blue spark and suddenly nothing worked..
After locating and replacing the blown fuse, I totally disconnected the new alternator and the vehicle started up on the battery alone as it had been doing.
I turned the engine off, disconnected the negative battery cable again, connected the ground cable and the four terminal connections to the alternator,
and when I reconnected the negative battery cable, my main fuse blew again.
That's where I am right now
There is obviously a fault in the electrical system somewhere, and I don't know how to even begin to troubleshoot for something like this.
I don't have any choice but to deal with this myself.
I need Help.
I just replaced the alternator in my 1989 Honda Prelude and now every time I reconnect my negative battery cable, I blow my main (70A) fuse. It's happened two times in a row.
Some background: My alternator burned out and stopped working about two weeks ago, but even before that, A mysterious drain appeared in my electrical system, causing my battery to go dead if I DIDN'T drive the car.
For example, If I drove it every day, it was fine, but if I skipped a day, the battery would be too drained out to turn the vehicle over. If I skipped two days the battery would barely light up the instrument panel.
So about two weeks ago, after the alternator left me stranded on the highway, I resorted to desperate measures.
I still needed the car to get to work, and I discovered that I could run it off the battery alone if I was careful, so I disconnected the alternator wires and started carrying around a second battery and a bench charger.
I would charge both batteries up, use one to get to work, then switch to the other for the ride home.
Somewhere along the line the unplugged 4-terminal plug that connects to the alternator touched the hot exhaust manifold and became a melted ruined mess.
When I installed the new alternator I worked around this by just cutting the ruined plug off and terminating each individual wire with a female spade connector the right size to slide onto the contacts inside the socket on the alternator.
I was Very Careful to make sure each wire was connected to the proper terminal in that socket, and double checked before attempting to start.
Besides the 4-terminal plug, there is also a single wire connection to the alternator, using a ring terminal held on with a nut. I believe it's the ground. I've isolated the problem to here.
The first time I blew my main fuse, this single wire was the only connection between the new alternator and the vehicle's systems.
This was actually left connected by mistake, but when I tried to reconnect the negative battery cable there was a big fat blue spark and suddenly nothing worked..
After locating and replacing the blown fuse, I totally disconnected the new alternator and the vehicle started up on the battery alone as it had been doing.
I turned the engine off, disconnected the negative battery cable again, connected the ground cable and the four terminal connections to the alternator,
and when I reconnected the negative battery cable, my main fuse blew again.
That's where I am right now
There is obviously a fault in the electrical system somewhere, and I don't know how to even begin to troubleshoot for something like this.
I don't have any choice but to deal with this myself.
I need Help.