brucejohnson
TDR MEMBER
John, you beat me to it...I assume that you have reinstalled your alternator and associated wire connections. If you have, do not install the fuse. Instead, using a test lamp, clamp one end to the positive post of a battery and touch other end to the alternator output terminal. The test lamp should NOT glow. If it does, then there is likely a diode shorted to ground in the alternator, or the alternator output wire is shorted to ground (not as likely).
If the test lamp doesn't glow, all is well. Install the new 140 amp fuse. That fuse is not there to protect the alternator. It is there in case something shorts to ground between the battery and the alternator. If the fuse wasn't there and a short to ground occurred, an engine fire could easily be started as you have two large batteries there to provide the necessary high current flow for quite awhile.
If there doesn't appear to be a direct cause for the fuse to blow, I don't think I would be too concerned. It could be that the fuse is tired because it is over 20 years old. It could that the alternator output was accidentally shorted to ground during an oil filter change..., it would take much a direct short to ground to blow the fuse.
- John
I was going to suggest removing the power output wire from the alternator or use the fuse socket that leads to the alternator, and take an ohmmeter (Diode check function) to check the diodes by putting the positive meter lead on the output terminal and negative on the case to see what reading shows. Then reverse the leads (positive on case and negative on output terminal}. The meter "should read an open, or very high impedance in one direction, and a few ohms in the other lead position as the diodes get forward biased. If there are shorts it will show up there, too.
Then there's the windings and brushes. Should show up something. Might account for the 79VAC reading earlier. (?? But it did check OK by a parts store)
As mentioned, maybe it was old and ready to give up after years of hot and cold cycles helping the batteries in feeding the grid heaters and other stuff.
Years ago, I was driving on I-5 in an 83 Monte Carlo when the car just up and quit. Pulled over to the side of the freeway and could not find anything wrong. Had to have it towed to a nearby dealer. Took them a day, but they found a fusible link blown. No evidence of any shorts, overheated wiring, etc. They replaced it and the car ran great for many more years. My luck with Chevies.
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