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Testing battery and charging system

Test Your Charging and Electrical System


Years ago I was a managing engineer at a company that manufactured automotive instrumentation and test equipment. We built some of the most popular aftermarket
timing lights, tachometers, dwell meters, and gauges. Our products were marketed by large companies like Sears, Mac Tools, and other mechanics tool suppliers, tool
distributors, and automotive electrical test equipment retailers. Most likely, if you have some older automotive electrical system test gear, I've had a hand in the design.
A lead-acid battery has certain defined characteristics than make it easy to evaluate the health of the charging system without fancy test gear. Here's how we can check
a charging system with a few simple pieces of equipment.
Most car people, with the best of intentions, just guess at problems and repeat advice others gave to them. This often leads to wasted money and time, and a problem
only gets fixed through sheer dumb luck.

Alternator
The alternator converts mechanical energy into electrical energy. Other than very small parasitic horsepower losses that slightly heat the bearings, the diodes, and the
windings, it only draws enough power from the crankshaft to supply the output power necessary to run the electrical system and charge the battery.
Contrary to myths and what sales departments would have you believe, using an underdrive pulley will not reduce horsepower consumed by the alternator while
racing.
When an alternator shaft is slowed, the voltage regulator simply turns up the field current until the alternator is back drawing exactly the same power it would have
when turning at higher speed! As a matter of fact, since efficiency drops with reduced rotor speeds, the alternator often draws more engine horsepower with an
underdrive pulley than it would with a regular standard shaft speed!
The only way to reliably and significantly reduce alternator drag is to turn the alternator off while racing, although turning lights and electrical accessories off during
racing certainly helps. Remember that when the vehicle is running the alternator tries to supply all the load energy. At reasonable to maximum engine speeds, typically
from 1500 RPM to redline with heavy loads, and from idle all the way to red line with light electrical accessory loads, the battery just goes along for the ride. It really
doesn't do anything, except wait for the alternator to fall below operating speeds. A battery will consume noticeable engine power only when the battery is low on
charge and the missing charge is being replenished. A battery, when charged, is really just an electrical storage tank.
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NEVER pull the battery cable to check the alternator. This very crude test method was marginally OK when we had vacuum tube car
radios and point-type ignitions, but it is a very bad idea now. The battery stabilizes the electrical system and loads the alternator, preventing high peak voltages or
voltage surges as the alternator adjusts magnetic flux to produce the same average voltage at different current demands. If you rev the engine up and pull a battery
cable, the alternator voltage can spike up to 100 volts or higher before the alternator flux dies off enough to bring voltage back down to 14 volts or so. This can kill the
car's computer and other expensive electrical components. I've seen headlights blow out when a guy opened a battery switch while an engine was revved up. If you
hear anyone telling someone this is a way to check an alternator in a modern vehicle, stop them!

TESTING the ALTERNATOR, is it good or bad?


To charge the battery, the alternator voltage output has to exceed a minimum charging voltage. This minimum charging voltage is 13.8 volts dc across the battery
terminals, or at the output of the alternator. A single lead-acid cell starts to charge at anything over 2.25 volts. Since a 12 volt battery has six cells, any 12 volt leadacid battery needs at least 13.8 volts to start to charge. This voltage will be enough to fully charge or maintain the battery on a trickle charge, but charging time will be
very long at 13.8 volts.

To fully charge in reasonable times, alternator output must be 14.2 V to 14.5 V as measured right across the battery posts.
Above 14.5 volts charging voltage, batteries have a greatly increased tendency to release excessive acidic vapors, hydrogen gas, and to
corrode things around the battery. The battery terminal charging voltage must be less than 14.7 volts to prevent excessive gassing.
Charging voltages over 14.7 volts can prematurely dry the battery by boiling out electrolyte, and increase risk of a battery hydrogen gas
explosion.

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In this case the battery charging voltage is 14.61 volts with the engine at high idle. 14.4 volts is the gassing threshold. The battery above will slightly gas, but not enough
to be harmful, and the battery will get a quick full charge recovery after starting. 14.8 would start to be a worry (there might be liquid or corrosion on the battery) and
15 volts would be a real concern, but 14.6 is fine. Less than 14.3 would be a "weak" alternator or regulator. Much less than 14.2 at a fast idle is bad wiring, bad
alternator or regulator, or a bad connection or fuse link. When running at a normal slow cruising engine RPM, the voltage across the battery terminals should stay over
14.3 volts even with full load, like lights, heater blower, and everything else, running. If this system was in a restored 1966 GT coupe, I would probably change the
regulator to reduce maximum alternator voltage. This would prevent deterioration of metal around the battery from excessive charging vapors. It's OK in my daily
driver as long as I watch the battery for purged acid deposits.
If you measure battery voltage and it is anywhere over 14.2 volts and less than 14.8 volts with the car running at slow cruising engine RPM speeds and maximum loads
on, you already have a bigger alternator than you need. If voltage is over 14.2 under maximum loads when at cruising RPM, buying a bigger alternator or a new
alternator is a waste of time and money.
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Turn the motor off with no load (headlights, etc. all OFF) and read the battery voltage.

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With the engine just shut off, the battery voltage should be 13.2 volts to 13.8 volts. The exact voltage varies with the battery, how quickly you read it, and the state of
battery charge. This voltage is not too important because the battery will slowly and steadily settle to a new voltage that indicates the true state of battery charge, but
the voltage measured right at engine shutoff is a very clear indicator if the alternator or charging system is charging. If the voltage is over 13.2, the battery was just
being charged.

So what happens if your battery goes dead all the time, but the alternator seems good?
Measuring electrical system leakage current

To test the electrical system for unwanted loads draining power, shut everything in the car off. Do just like you would do things when
parking the car overnight. make sure all the lights and accessories are off.
Remove the negative post wire and check current draw with all electrical loads off using a test light. (I made a test light from an old tail
lamp bulb.)

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The dull glow in the light filament indicates a current drain problem. At this point I do not want to connect a current meter to check leakage because the short could
damage the test meter! If a small clear test lamp like this does not light, then it is generally safe to directly measure current drain with a test meter.

Measuring Parasitic Current Drain

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With all electrical loads off connect the meter, on a low amperes scale of about 1 ampere or so, in series with the battery negative post to ground. The positive meter
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lead connects to the car chassis, and negative meter lead to the negative post of the battery.

A good electrical system battery drain

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This is measured on the 20mA scale. The mA scale reads in thousandths of an ampere. My 1989 Mustang LX, after I changed a bad alternator diode, now has about
1.73 mA of battery drain. This drain is all from the EEC-IV computer memory. Different radios and different computers might have different standby drains, as might
accessories like clocks, but in no case should "overnight off" leakage exceed 25 mA or so. 100 mA is like leaving a small interior dome light on!
My Kenwood stereo draws 1.5 mA when connected. If you have a digital clock that stays on, an alarm, or some other load this current will be higher. At 75 mA,
leakage could compromise battery life of infrequently driven vehicles. mA is milliamperes, or one 1000th's of an ampere.

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The meter above is on the 20 mA scale, and is reading 1.73 mA. That is nothing. The battery charge would probably last for months of sitting.

Bad battery parasitic Drain


If the test light lit, you will want to locate the wire loading the battery. First make sure all lights are off. You can do this by having someone open and shut things with
lights, like the trunk, and watching for a define large load change. You should see a definite load change when shutting doors with lights, like the glove compartment.
Connect the test light in series with the negative post, and start pulling feed wires. The first to check is the heavy charging wire from the alternator. A bad or leaky
diode in an alternator is a very common source of overnight battery drain.

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Connect wires one at a time to see what lead is drawing current. In my case it was the alternator lead! Even though the alternator was charging fine, it was also draining
the battery. My problem was a bad alternator diode. There could be a variety of other problems, like a bad voltage regulator or a stuck relay contact.

Download a wiring diagram


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I downloaded this from T. Moss's website, which I find much more useful than other sources. Tom Moss goes out of his way to help people, and is a genuinely
nice fellow. AutoZone and others have some free schematics up also.

T.Moss's diagram (linked above) showed me the heavy dark green wire from my starter relay causing my "drain problem" went directly to my car's alternator output.
In my case one of the diodes (the little black "arrows") in my car's alternator was bad. This current loss also made my alternator slightly warm to the touch, even when
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sitting off for several hours.

Other Helpful Voltages


Battery voltage can be higher than 12.6 volts immediately after charging.
Open Circuit Voltage of 12V battery
after car is off for one hour

Relative
charge

12.6 V

100%

12.4 V

75%

12.2 V

50%

12.1 V

25%

Less than 12 volts

Dead

Any open terminal voltage below 12 volts is considered full discharge or a dead battery.

Testing Starters
Starters sometimes can test good out of the car, but can be bad. One common problem with cheaply built or defective starters is starting torque loss when hot. This
usually happens because the iron loses ability to hold magnetic flux (starter current skyrockets when hot), or because the wire is undersized and goes up in resistance
(starter current drops when hot), or the starter seizes up (also causing high current).
The best way to test a starter is by measuring voltage and current.
To test a starter and wiring with a simple meter:
Clip the meter positive lead to the starter feed wire going into the starter
Clip the meter's black negative lead to the ENGINE BLOCK
Make sure the meter is on volts, and set to the lowest voltage scale possible that reads at least 15 volts. In other words if your meter has 2.5-volt, 25-volt
scale, and 250-volt scales, use the 25-volt scale. The 25-volt scale is the closest scale to 15 volts, but is not under 15 volts.
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With the meter clipped across the starter, watch the meter while cranking the engine.
Make sure the battery is good. There is a voltage table above for battery charge. The no load (everything off) battery post voltage should be at least 12.6 volts and as
high as 13.8 volts.
If the starter cranking voltage goes below 9-10 volts, you have a problem with starter current, engine grounding, or battery.
Measure across the battery by probing directly into the battery posts (NOT the terminals that clamp to the posts, but poke directly into the lead posts coming out of
the battery), and see how much the battery drops when cranking. If it drops and you are sure the alternator is working, take the battery to an automotive parts store
that tests batteries. Unlike starters, testing batteries is VERY easy and very reliable.
If the battery stays up on the posts and the starter voltage sagged down, you probably have a bad starter wire, ground wire, or some other wiring problem. If the
battery post voltage tests good but sags abnormally with your starter, you probably have a starter problem. You need to have starter current checked.
Cheap or poorly manufactured starters show up mostly when the starter is very hot. Starters very often cannot be tested accurately on a bench, because they often can
fail only when very hot. I see very few tractors, cars, and trucks that crank OK when cold and do not crank when hot that have problems other than a starter! My
diesel tractor was a bitch to start when hot, but cranked like a dream when cold, and it was the starter. My tractor does not have headers, either. Just the block heat
was enough to make the starter quit. I've had the same experience with cars. When cold, the starters work and test good! Marginal starters can have enough oomph to
start properly when the system is cold, but fail when hot.
Bad alternators or batteries show up mostly when the car is very cold, but both alternators and batteries can be tested reliably to see if they are good.
Installing a larger alternator will not fix a bad starter, bad battery, or bad wiring.

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