GAmes
TDR MEMBER
Last week while crossing southern ID I noticed that my volt gauge was reading higher than normal. Outside air temp was in the single digits. I reasoned that the cold air was raising the voltage demand on the alternator which is normal. Then my GEN light came on. I have my grid heaters on a toggle switch so I flipped them on which brought my gage down to the bottom of the arc (13 volts?). After a minute or so I turned the grid heaters off, the needle went to it's normal range and the GEN light went out. The next day, in OR with the temps in the teens it happened again. Same procedure, same results. Two days later, temps in the teens, same problem, same procedure, same results. I decided that my battery temp sensor had failed and the cold weather was the catalyst. However, back in TX the temps were in the 40s and it happened again. Same story. Today I removed the temp sensor and it tests good. Before I spend nearly $50 for a new sensor I'm looking for another explanation for the spike in voltage that was corrected by putting a large load on the alternator.