The worlds most dangerous shadetree mechanic is at it again... 
Wife's 2003 died this week. Monday it had to be jumpstarted after record setting -20F temps and a gelled fuel episode. All seemed fine until Thur when it died on the road. Dead batteries.
Jumpstarted again but Check Gauges lights came on after a short distance. I told her to head to local parts store and have the batts/alternator tested. Diagnosis was batteries are fine but alternator is bad. Got a new one and installed it yesterday.
Batteries have and seem to hold a full charge. Gauge starts out looking normal - approx 13v - however after driving about 1/4 mile down our bumpy gravel driveway with lights on, the Check Gauges light comes back on and volt meter snaps down to zero. I brought it home, shut down, tested batts with a voltmeter and they are still at 13. 5 volts. Started truck again and repeated. Same failure at almost the same spot in the driveway.
Based on some reading here, I have verified the batt voltage at 13. 5 with the truck off. Also measured voltage at the bolt on the back of the alternator and it is also 13. 5. Battery terminals are clean, I cleaned and dilectric-greased the plug connector on the alternator. Serp belt is tight and in good shape.
Questions are:
1. Could I have killed a brand new alternator?
2. Is it possible the parts store misdiagnosed and these batteries are not healthy after all? They are the original batts on a 2003...
3. Is it possibly the voltage regulator? If so, is there a way to diagnose before buying new?
I can not sort out from my reading here whether the voltage regulator is a seperate component from the PCM, but that doesn't matter since I don't have a clue where either one is.
Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks!
Jim
on edit: Forgot to add that there are no codes set, according to the reader I have.

Wife's 2003 died this week. Monday it had to be jumpstarted after record setting -20F temps and a gelled fuel episode. All seemed fine until Thur when it died on the road. Dead batteries.
Jumpstarted again but Check Gauges lights came on after a short distance. I told her to head to local parts store and have the batts/alternator tested. Diagnosis was batteries are fine but alternator is bad. Got a new one and installed it yesterday.
Batteries have and seem to hold a full charge. Gauge starts out looking normal - approx 13v - however after driving about 1/4 mile down our bumpy gravel driveway with lights on, the Check Gauges light comes back on and volt meter snaps down to zero. I brought it home, shut down, tested batts with a voltmeter and they are still at 13. 5 volts. Started truck again and repeated. Same failure at almost the same spot in the driveway.
Based on some reading here, I have verified the batt voltage at 13. 5 with the truck off. Also measured voltage at the bolt on the back of the alternator and it is also 13. 5. Battery terminals are clean, I cleaned and dilectric-greased the plug connector on the alternator. Serp belt is tight and in good shape.
Questions are:
1. Could I have killed a brand new alternator?
2. Is it possible the parts store misdiagnosed and these batteries are not healthy after all? They are the original batts on a 2003...
3. Is it possibly the voltage regulator? If so, is there a way to diagnose before buying new?
I can not sort out from my reading here whether the voltage regulator is a seperate component from the PCM, but that doesn't matter since I don't have a clue where either one is.
Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks!
Jim
on edit: Forgot to add that there are no codes set, according to the reader I have.
Last edited: