My tachometer Seems to hunt around even though the engine RPM's are not changing. What is the cause of this and what is the best way to trouble shoot it?
@Hayden Watson , while you're in there: you might consider "resetting" your tach if it has the older dip switches. Over the years some have reported that merely moving the dip switches and back to their original positions "clears" the tach. Our C34 tech wiki has the Teleflex manuals, IIRC.the engine panel in the cockpit.
I guess that is the next step.
My understanding is that dielectric grease is a non-conductor so it inhibits the flow of current but it helps to prevent corrosion.@Hayden Watson , ...Consider using dialectric grease or at least T9 on them.
Good luck.
Yeah, I used to think that until I did "my research & homework." Like I've been suggesting for decades.My understanding is that dielectric grease is a non-conductor so it inhibits the flow of current but it helps to prevent corrosion.
What alternator?My tachometer Seems to hunt around even though the engine RPM's are not changing. What is the cause of this and what is the best way to trouble shoot it?
That was what I did. I have used dielectric grease on my boat for years but then I decided to look it up and found this.Yeah, I used to think that until I did "my research & homework." Like I've been suggesting for decades.
I use it on my model railroad, too. Choo Choo....
I often also suggest RTFM. So I read the label!Case closed --- that's why they make it. Lousy name, great performance!
What alternator? Amply Power
How many poles? unknown
What is driving it belt wise? 3/8" gates belt
How many amps is the alt? 105
Internal or external regulation? Xantrex
What batteries? Lifeline 4D very near end of life.
What tachometer? factory Catalina. Don't know any more than that.
Any other charge sources on the bus? I do not have a charge bus. The alt is connected to a diode based battery combiner with direct leads to the house and start batteries.
Occurring in bulk only? I have not noticed that type of particular. It seems to run steady and then will jump around (rapid 800-1000 rpm swings) for a while.
Occurring in absorption only? See above
Have you compared it to a digital photo tach? I have not, but I now have one and will check. The swings in the tach are huge and it is obvious that the engine is not making those speed changes.
We Can't help if you don't provide enough information....
Thanks Maine Sail. I did not have any other charging when I see tach fluctuations but suspect that voltage overshoot you mention is the most likely candidate. The battery is toast and will be replaced shortly and the internal resistance is really high. It hits set voltage as soon as I start the engine and the capacity is nil.Charge bus simply means; anything else charging the batteries when you ran this test?
A 3/8" belt is way undersized for a 105A alt charging AGM batteries. However slippage would not rear its ugly head when charging full batteries as current would be extremely low.
That old Xantrex regulator is slow to react and offers no way to limit alternator output to match the belt. If something else is charging the bank when you ran this test the Xantrex may be cutting the field temporarily to try and keep the voltage where it needs to be. If the batteries were truly 100% SoC this can also happen as the Xantrex often can't react quickly enough to prevent voltage over-shoot. When alternator field stops, so does the tach.
Try applying a decent load to the DC bus and see if the tach stabilizes.
Unless the isolator is a FET based low voltage drop-unit, diode isolators are a poor choice for alternator performance but it has likely saved your belts and alternator from heat damage.......
early M25’s won’t accept any serpentine kit. Your crank pulley needs to have the 3 bolt holes for a pto. I don’t know when it was introduced as standard, but not on my 83 and not on @Stu Jackson 34 (87??). Good news is if you can source an XPB crank pulley it should fit.Along with a new house bank, I plan to install a serpentine belt kit. The battery sense voltage is taken from the house battery and my understanding was that would overcome the normal 0.7v drop across the diodes. Is that not correct?
After I have the serpentine belt and a new battery that can actually except the current, there will be times that I will probably want to reduce the current being generated. Can I just add a rheostat to the field wire to cut the current manually when wanted?