Hi everyone!
I have a 1989 W250 with an A727 trans. Its old iron but it gets the job done and I've owned it a long time. 2 batteries ago I got amazing service life out of it. The battery after that only lasted a short time. I noticed a sulpher smell when stopped and thought nothing of it at first but when I touched the battery cable, I noticed it was hot. They battery soon failed.
Now I have a new battery and took a voltage reading. It was charging at about 18 volts! I did some online searching and found I am not alone with this problem. Here is what I have done so far:
1) Ran a 6ga wire from the negative terminal of the battery to the firewall on the same screw that mounts to the voltage regulator.
2) Installed a parallel jumper wire from the blue wire between the regulator and alternator to cure the slight voltage drop I was reading.
3) Installed a heavy duty relay with 10GA wire straight from the positive of the battery to the blue wire of the regulator. I have to use a separate toggle switch for the relay or it backfeeds power keeping the engine running even if the key is turned off. I'g guessing I would need a diode somewhere to be able to make the relay go on & off with the ignition key.
4) I can turn the charging system on or off from the cab by a tglle switch I installed between the green wire leading from the regulator to the alternator. If the volt meter (I had to install) shows the voltage getting too high, I simply shut off the charging system.
The battery now charges between 14. 6 and 15 volts. I still think thats a bit high. I tried another voltage regulator but that didn't make any difference. It was a cheapo aftermarket regulator as is the one that came with my used truck. Any suggestions before I try to retrofit an entirely different alternator? I've read rumors that maybe an OEM or Napa regulator might work better but I hate to invest to find out it doesn't really help. Thanks for any insight.
Other than that, its been a heck of a reliable truck. I've always put a dab of outboard 2-stroke oil in the fuel (about 3/4 oz per gallon) and have never had any (VE) pump issues (knock on wood).
The turn signals stopped working but a few squirts of carb cleaner into the column switch fixed that right up.
The steering is a bit sloppy but I'm used to it.
I hate the gearing with a slippy converter & no overdrive but its hard to complain too much with such a great engine under the hood. Does a great job of pulling my boat.
I have a 1989 W250 with an A727 trans. Its old iron but it gets the job done and I've owned it a long time. 2 batteries ago I got amazing service life out of it. The battery after that only lasted a short time. I noticed a sulpher smell when stopped and thought nothing of it at first but when I touched the battery cable, I noticed it was hot. They battery soon failed.
Now I have a new battery and took a voltage reading. It was charging at about 18 volts! I did some online searching and found I am not alone with this problem. Here is what I have done so far:
1) Ran a 6ga wire from the negative terminal of the battery to the firewall on the same screw that mounts to the voltage regulator.
2) Installed a parallel jumper wire from the blue wire between the regulator and alternator to cure the slight voltage drop I was reading.
3) Installed a heavy duty relay with 10GA wire straight from the positive of the battery to the blue wire of the regulator. I have to use a separate toggle switch for the relay or it backfeeds power keeping the engine running even if the key is turned off. I'g guessing I would need a diode somewhere to be able to make the relay go on & off with the ignition key.
4) I can turn the charging system on or off from the cab by a tglle switch I installed between the green wire leading from the regulator to the alternator. If the volt meter (I had to install) shows the voltage getting too high, I simply shut off the charging system.
The battery now charges between 14. 6 and 15 volts. I still think thats a bit high. I tried another voltage regulator but that didn't make any difference. It was a cheapo aftermarket regulator as is the one that came with my used truck. Any suggestions before I try to retrofit an entirely different alternator? I've read rumors that maybe an OEM or Napa regulator might work better but I hate to invest to find out it doesn't really help. Thanks for any insight.
Other than that, its been a heck of a reliable truck. I've always put a dab of outboard 2-stroke oil in the fuel (about 3/4 oz per gallon) and have never had any (VE) pump issues (knock on wood).
The turn signals stopped working but a few squirts of carb cleaner into the column switch fixed that right up.
The steering is a bit sloppy but I'm used to it.
I hate the gearing with a slippy converter & no overdrive but its hard to complain too much with such a great engine under the hood. Does a great job of pulling my boat.