So with all the accolades we're giving Neihoff at this point, perhaps there's a better question: Is it (100A) overloaded in a stock A1? Seems like the adjectives of "robust" and "rarely fail" and "no data" are ignored when it's considered overloaded. So is it overloaded? Yes or no? (Don't forget that hard pulsing 90A AIH draw)
For the record, I DO have a failed 100a Neihoff alternator at the local rebuild shop. Already dropped $800 on a failed regulator 2k miles ago with only 9k on the truck at the time. He tested it on his bench setup and it's putting out 50A max on his tester. So he's tearing into it. I'll know more once he's done. So apparently I'm the only person in the known universe that's ever had a bad Neihoff alt?, I should be shamed drawn and quartered. lol. Tyler screwed me again? I'm betting that's it
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On the LBCD, I see 2 big capacitors and 2 diodes. The diodes can go in the PDP. The patent app discuses "ripple reduction during battery-less operation". If you eliminate "battery less operation" you don't need this mystical black box which imho as an EE does nothing but bust my balls. I gave mine away, with cash and bitcoin to a needy family along with the power relay. I shorted my manual disco terminals with bus bars for security but they're easily removable for maintenance. I'll post that another place. So I'm never in battery less mode
Further food for thought, convince me that at $800+ per regulator and god knows what for the alt itself ($1200), why isn't this thing able to produce 200% and never fail regardless of load duty? If I gave you $2000, could you buy a better more capable unit in the commercial market? With ALL the 12v load removed on mine with 2batts I'm pulling 115A during initial startup for several minutes. Is that an overload on a N1511?
my professional opinion (FWIW) is that this pulsing 90A AIH is an ALT wrecker or at least a Regulator wrecker. I'd have to test 2 units side by side to prove it thou.