Jake The Snake
TDR MEMBER

The issues always seem to be when it is cold, I live in very northern Minnesota, so that is often. I don't ever have a problem starting the truck and the ammeter will alternate between 12 volts and 14 volts during warm up which is standard in my experience, during normal operation the ammeter shows just over 14 volts, but if I don't let the truck warm up for an extended period (2-3 minutes) the ammeter will gradually show the collapse of the voltage to far left - zero volts. This problem is intermittent and has rarely occurred in our 1-2 month "summers".
The truck has not left me stranded in 14 years but has sometimes caused me to pull to the side of the road with a dash light that says "check your gauges" and when I do, I see the ammeter voltage collapsing. After shutting off the truck at roadside and waiting for a couple of moments it will restart and then I am required to give the "old girl" a 2-3 minute warm up and when the ammeter shows 14 volts steady I am able to drive off without further delay. One of these days I am concerned that it will strand me or even worse possibly burn up. I have replace the batteries as recently as 2014 and there is no visible cable corrosion, I check that often as part of my maintenance routines, so I don't suspect them as a culprit.
My mechanic and I are puzzled and annoyed so any help you can provide will be greatly appreciated.