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About the Blinking Lights on the N1509 Regulator

Lugnuts

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I was once told that when you have a different subject to bring up you start a new post, so I am but it is still in regard to Alternators. On a recent post I was dealing with a N1506 Alternator and found that the alternator itself was bad. I went to Forestry Division who is handling parting out some of the trucks and I obtained a N1509 Alternator, unknown condition. I commenced to bolt in and all wiring is the same, cleaned connections, and started. I immediately saw that I had no blinking lights. I checked voltage at battery and alternator and found acceptable charge rates, a touch high but acceptable/ 28.6vdc and 14.4vdc/ I obtained the Niehoff Manual and it stated that if lights were not on that regulator was not on, to check pin e for voltage and I haven't got back down there to do that. My question is why do I have acceptable voltages if the regulator is not suppose to be on and can I use the truck this way. I am not asking permission but merely asking for the experience of those who may have had this happen to them.
So I painted a target on me, fire away guys., and thank you
 

GeneralDisorder

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It's not impossible for the LED's in the regulator to have failed or part of the circuit that drives them - do you have another regulator from your old unit to try? Those voltages are good - you will have about a 0.70v drop across the polarity protection device so that's exactly what you want to see from the alternator.
 

Lugnuts

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It's not impossible for the LED's in the regulator to have failed or part of the circuit that drives them - do you have another regulator from your old unit to try? Those voltages are good - you will have about a 0.70v drop across the polarity protection device so that's exactly what you want to see from the alternator.
The other Regulator has no Lights. Thank you for your response and I will do the flow chart on Saturday and post the results. I know for sure that when you start the truck and watch the voltage gauge you can see the oil pressure happen and then the alternator fire up.
 

Ronmar

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What General Disorder said. It could be that the monitor circuit has failed. Since it is putting out power, I suspect you will find 24V on the forward screw terminal(E/EXC/ENG) when the engine is running.

It is obviously making power if you are seeing 14 and 28V. The voltages that Neihoff specced for these(14.1/28.2) has always struck me as a little low. Automotive standard for a alt feeding a lead acid is 14.5+/- 0.5V, so yours are not a touch high, everyone elses are a touch low…:)

Glad you got it working.
 
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GeneralDisorder

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What General Disorder said. It could be that the monitor circuit has failed. Since it is putting out power, I suspect you will find 24V on the forward screw terminal(E/EXC/ENG) when the engine is running.

It is obviously making power if you are seeing 14 and 28V. The voltages that Neihoff specced for these(14.1/28.2) has always struck me as a little low. Automotive standard for a alt feeding a lead acid is 14.5+/- 0.5V, so yours are not a touch high, everyone elses are a touch low…:)

Glad you got it working.
And after you run those voltages through the PPD/LBCD the diodes drop the voltage another 0.7v so what you see at the PDP is about 27.5v and 13.4v. Which is really fine as everything computer-wise has to run on 10v or even lower during cranking. The batteries see 28 and 14 not being on the load side of the LBCD.
 
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