Re: IML: more on alternators
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Re: IML: more on alternators



Mikey,
     To clarify the point that I was trying to make with my 69
Imperial.  It had been changed to the old mechanical voltage
regulator and the old alternator, not the alternator made for the
transisterized voltage regulator.  So, in summary my 69 had the
same charging system as the rest of the 69 Chrysler line,
mechanical charging system.

Æyn

--- mike and linda sutton <mikanlin62@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> Someone asked about mixing one style of alternator with a
> voltage regulator 
> for the other....without being TOO overly technical, heres why
> that doesnt 
> work.
> 
> The early alternators were designed with one field brush
> receiving voltage 
> and the other brush lead went to ground. The regulator - points
> style or 
> transistorized - sends voltage to the field brush which goes
> thru the field 
> coil and creates a magnetic field and then goes to ground, to
> be more 
> specific.  Now, the points style regulator simply opens and
> closes a set of 
> contact points much like a set of distributor points according
> to what 
> system voltage it senses and it pulses the contact points very
> rapidly, 
> effectively controlling the voltage to the field coil which
> controls the 
> output.  The transistorized regulator does the same thing but
> uses a 
> transistor instead of a set of points, but it is still pulsing
> the input to 
> the field coil to control the output.  Regardless, one brush is
> " hot " and 
> the other goes to ground , usually right on the back of the
> alternator.
> 
> In the later alternators, both brushes are " hot "  ...current
> goes in one 
> brush, thru the field coil and then out the other brush and
> doesnt go to 
> ground at the alternator, it goes to ground when it reaches the
> regulator. 
> It does the same thing, controls the effective amount of
> voltage and current 
> thru the field coil by pulsing it, but it accomplishes this in
> a different 
> manner.  It still goes to ground but it does it at a different
> physical 
> location.
> 
> The short version of this, you should keep apples with apples,
> if your car 
> has the older style alternator use the points style regulator
> or one of the 
> solid state regulators designed to work with it.  If you have
> the newer 
> style isolated/insulated field brush units, use a regulator
> designed for it.
> 
> Ill defer to Dick B on this for the electrical analysis, since
> he has 
> counted more electrons in his working life than Ive been able
> to set loose 
> by letting all the smoke out of the wires.  Is this not the
> correct scenario 
> Dick?
> 
> Mikey
> 62 Crown Coupe 
> 
> 
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