Re: 1986 GV ORED not charging and other electrical issues
Reply #18 –
Referring only to your alternator situation, my opinion on your statements (above) is as follows:
1. Wiring the alternator directly to a battery makes it work. Good. This proves it is "self energized" and does not require a "Excite" wire to operate.
2. IMO that small wire is doing nothing. I would again encourage you to remove it and see if the alternator still works. If it does, leave the small wire disconnected.
3. IF by "main batteries" you mean the engine start batteries, then you already have the alternator wired to work. Just do as you said - insulate the connection and tie the cables down so they don't flop around.
4. The isolator is broken, so remove it. No need to replace it.
5. Your coach will work fine with the alternator wired direct to the start batteries. You DO need a working BOOST solenoid if you want to be able to charge both engine start and coach batteries with the alternator.
6. If the alternator needed a small wire of any kind attached to one of the small posts, they would be marked in some way. I do not believe you need the small red wire, but you do what you think is best.
The photo below shows an alternator with a design similar to yours (regulator is different). The three small unmarked posts are labeled AC terminals. Also known as "AC taps". These posts should put out roughly one half of the DC voltage being generated by the alternator, or around 7 volts. Exactly what you report. These posts are not normally connected to anything except perhaps bench test equipment.