SFCPappy
New member
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- Location
- Bristol, Tennessee
Got back last month from a road trip of 1200 miles in my M925A1. All was good until I was 120 miles from home, coming back. It was late night and noticed my headlights getting dimmer. I pulled into first available truck stop and wait for daylight. No luck finding a place to park a 5 ton pulling a M989A1 HEMAT. Just as I was pulling out to park on exit Ramo shoulder lights lit up pretty bright. So I decided to continue on to Knoxville. About a mile from the truck stop I started smelling electrical smoke. I pulled over at the exit I was coming up on and checked for fire. Parked for the night. Next morning I bypassed the PCB and started it up. Went on into Knoxville and stopped at truck stop. After assessment I found the PCB had crashed and the alternator was what was smoking when I turned battery power back on and started engine.
Question 1. Would a bad PCB cause the alternator to fry?
2. If not what caused the alternator to go into super charge? Bad rectifier? Bad regulator? I've found a way to build a cheaper yet more efficient pcb but without the circuit board. A new PCB is @ $350.00. I'm poor. But I don't want to toast my 5 ton. I still use it by bypassing the PCB but with the alternator disconnected I have to charge each battery by battery charger. So I'm asking for the best advice.
Question 1. Would a bad PCB cause the alternator to fry?
2. If not what caused the alternator to go into super charge? Bad rectifier? Bad regulator? I've found a way to build a cheaper yet more efficient pcb but without the circuit board. A new PCB is @ $350.00. I'm poor. But I don't want to toast my 5 ton. I still use it by bypassing the PCB but with the alternator disconnected I have to charge each battery by battery charger. So I'm asking for the best advice.