I'm highly suspicious of the alternator's pulley, the belt or the brushes, if it needs that many revs to get the voltage up, but it sounds like things aren't too bad.
Typically, alternator output is rectified (because alternators actually produce AC) then regulated to somewhere between 14.4 and 14.7V. You'll see it as 14.1 to 14.4V when you check the running vehicle (because things are running and power is being consumed). It seems that at 1,000rpm yours is working properly - now you need to determine if you've got a loose fan belt, pulley or something.
When you FIRST start the car batt volts should be mid-13s or so but the act of starting (draws about 500A) for (say) 3 seconds actually only uses 0.4Ah so replenishing that at a nominal 20A of output should take the alternator about a minute and a half.
So - if you don't see 14V after two minutes of engine running, something's not quite right. Could be a loose belt or pulley (more commonly the belt, I've only heard of the keyway breaking on the shaft once). It could also be the battery with some internal fault - some sulphation, or cell wall degradation.
Bit concerned about those fuses blowing. Has the harness suffered any impact? What about heat damage? Could the wiring have been subjected to a high enough current to cause the insulation on some of the wires to melt? That would cause unpredictable results, blowing fuses that shouldn't have any problem.
Actually while I think about it I'm not sure the 10A fuse in the alternator would be enough, if the alternator is capable of delivering 90A I'd expect the fuse to be a little higher than 10A!
Actually while I think about it I'm not sure the 10A fuse in the alternator would be enough, if the alternator is capable of delivering 90A I'd expect the fuse to be a little higher than 10A!
Actually while I think about it I'm not sure the 10A fuse in the alternator would be enough, if the alternator is capable of delivering 90A I'd expect the fuse to be a little higher than 10A!
There should be 2 fuses.... one for charging the battery (80A Fusable Link) and the other one for the charging/warning light, etc on the Dash. this one is 10A.
Not sure if this will help u.....see attached pic
Tony I believe that 10A fuse supplies excitation current to the alternator, 10A is "ample" (sorry, couldn't resist). So to throw something else into the conversation, Flynn i think you mentioned that the battery light on the dash is sometimes on? Is it on at the same time that you are measuring <12V at the battery & alternator? As the lamp is illuminated by the difference in potential between the battery and the alternator, when the battery is higher the lamp is on. If excitation current does not reach the alternator, it will not generate.
The fuse in that diagram will be to protect the instrument cluster, and pin 35 just happens to run to the alternator - in the diagram, it looks like there's no fuse external to the alternator providing excitation current although the diagram I found for the 2001 alternator shows a 10A fuse heading to the connector on the alternator marked 'S', the fuse being located in the "fusible link and fuse box". Let's assume THIS is the fuse that keeps blowing.
It still makes me think the alternator has a problem. The power going in through that connection isn't going to be great anyway, so it's unlikely that it's a load issue - more likely a fault issue that's blowing this fuse and this is the next job - finding the fault.
The exploded diagram on the following pages shows the regulator as an integral part of the unit, and I notice further on that they specify not only minimum brush length of 5mm for the Mitsubishi alternator (6mm for the Hitachi) but a brush pressure of 487-612grams (Mitsubishi) or 102-350g (Hitachi). Regulated output voltage range for both is specified as 14.1 to 14.7V. There are minimum RPM levels to produce power, looks like the Hitachi is better at producing voltage at low RPM but the Mitsubishi produces more current. Both have shaft RPM minimums (1000-Hitachi, 1300-Mitsubishi) and given the difference in pulley diameter between crank/alternator on mine I'd guess the alternator would be spinning at double the engine rate at least, so idle should produce some power.
Nice job finding that. Glad its all sorted now. Maybe the airbox was trying to get revenge for being put in a Nissan, lol
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