devilman96
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WHHOOOooooo Horsey.... Some confusion needs to be cleared up here before any one can help and I think ya got 10 to many things going on at once...
First...
Ditto on what Mike said... batteries in pairs only, meaning to exactly the same and bought at the same time... and stop using your truck to jump start the deuce or you will be buying a alternator and battery for that soon too... Also, the biggest battery you can find in Pep Boys with 900 CCA (proably a group 30) is not necessary going to work very well in a Deuce, especially not during a PA winter spinning a 22:1 ratio diesel. I am not saying it will not work, im just saying there are better things to be had that ya might wanna consider.
Second...
You have a charging system that is not charging???... OR by the battery count with shorted cells a charging system that is OVER charging???... OR you've been over charging the batteries with a battery charger???... Or your flat lining them by discharging them to much???... You need to get your alternator tested by a qualified shop for several reasons... If that is your problem it could fix everything... if it is not then you stand a good chance of screwing up your newly repaired / rebuilt alternator when you hook it back up. Make sure you tell the shop that you have a current draw and that you need to know what is going on with the repairs.
Third...
Current draw when in the off position... A bad diode in the alternator?... The shop testing it will rule this out... A bad wiring scenario... Again this could screw up your newly repaired/ tested alternator... For some this would be easy but for the majority this would be a daunting task to sort out. If you are going to trouble shoot this yourself make SURE you only have the batteries connected when needed and only hook the alternator back up when you figure it out... Make sure you have to right tools, volt meter, test light, jumpers, etc and make sure you give yourself a crash course on learning how to read them properly...
Fourth... maybe....
You now have a bad solenoid? Alternators don't have solenoids... Starters do... Which you will not find in pep boys and proably needs to be changed by a shop. But if the truck started right up when jumped... How is the solenoid bad? Or were you bypassing it? Im confused by this...
Its is easily possible to keep chasing the same problem over and over getting something fixed and then screwing it up again by only having fixed a consequence of the problem rather than the problem its self. Again I am going to lean towards a new harness install, this can save you soooo much heart ache especally having new lables!!! and with the exception of fighting with the dash is not at ALL hard to do...
Be mindful of what you are messing with... 24V is not a lot of juice but it is a lot of amperage, I have seen guys gets seriously screwed up by batteries and jumping wires and cables around. A short will burn the hell out of you with melted wire, plastic, or metal from a post or cable lead and if they were to explode (had it happen personally) acid does wonders for the eyes, skin, etc... Not to mention the mess it creates of your truck and anything else it comes into contact with.
There are guys here in the Philadelphia area... It may be possible to enlist some help, do some trading, buy some fuel, lunch and beer, flat out pay for time, etc and get your self some help over for a Saturday afternoon version of "This Ole Truck".
First...
Ditto on what Mike said... batteries in pairs only, meaning to exactly the same and bought at the same time... and stop using your truck to jump start the deuce or you will be buying a alternator and battery for that soon too... Also, the biggest battery you can find in Pep Boys with 900 CCA (proably a group 30) is not necessary going to work very well in a Deuce, especially not during a PA winter spinning a 22:1 ratio diesel. I am not saying it will not work, im just saying there are better things to be had that ya might wanna consider.
Second...
You have a charging system that is not charging???... OR by the battery count with shorted cells a charging system that is OVER charging???... OR you've been over charging the batteries with a battery charger???... Or your flat lining them by discharging them to much???... You need to get your alternator tested by a qualified shop for several reasons... If that is your problem it could fix everything... if it is not then you stand a good chance of screwing up your newly repaired / rebuilt alternator when you hook it back up. Make sure you tell the shop that you have a current draw and that you need to know what is going on with the repairs.
Third...
Current draw when in the off position... A bad diode in the alternator?... The shop testing it will rule this out... A bad wiring scenario... Again this could screw up your newly repaired/ tested alternator... For some this would be easy but for the majority this would be a daunting task to sort out. If you are going to trouble shoot this yourself make SURE you only have the batteries connected when needed and only hook the alternator back up when you figure it out... Make sure you have to right tools, volt meter, test light, jumpers, etc and make sure you give yourself a crash course on learning how to read them properly...
Fourth... maybe....
You now have a bad solenoid? Alternators don't have solenoids... Starters do... Which you will not find in pep boys and proably needs to be changed by a shop. But if the truck started right up when jumped... How is the solenoid bad? Or were you bypassing it? Im confused by this...
Its is easily possible to keep chasing the same problem over and over getting something fixed and then screwing it up again by only having fixed a consequence of the problem rather than the problem its self. Again I am going to lean towards a new harness install, this can save you soooo much heart ache especally having new lables!!! and with the exception of fighting with the dash is not at ALL hard to do...
Be mindful of what you are messing with... 24V is not a lot of juice but it is a lot of amperage, I have seen guys gets seriously screwed up by batteries and jumping wires and cables around. A short will burn the hell out of you with melted wire, plastic, or metal from a post or cable lead and if they were to explode (had it happen personally) acid does wonders for the eyes, skin, etc... Not to mention the mess it creates of your truck and anything else it comes into contact with.
There are guys here in the Philadelphia area... It may be possible to enlist some help, do some trading, buy some fuel, lunch and beer, flat out pay for time, etc and get your self some help over for a Saturday afternoon version of "This Ole Truck".