radrob
New member
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Hi everyone, I am new here and this is going to be my first post. I am brand new to the world of Humvee's, but not new to the automotive world.
Recently we acquired a '92 Humvee and it was in great condition mechanically and cosmetically. When we first acquired it, the truck was a little sluggish to crank and fire, but it did so just fine. I was planning on adding a bunch of electronics to it for some testing purposes, so I decided to just go ahead an swap out the batteries. I went ahead and installed 2 new Optima yellow tops, and rewired them the same way the old ones came out. Everything was completely fine, except for the battery voltage gauge would jump around on initial start up. It jumps around for about 5 minutes before settling down and stays solidly in the green right where it needs to be. Now if its night time and the headlights are on, they flicker with the gauge jumping around, but once everything settles down, they stay nice and steady. Being that this was just a test vehicle for us to develop some products for, I didn't think much of it as even if it sat for a week or 2, it would crank right up no issues and not even slightly sluggish.
Fast forward to last week, some coworkers took it to lunch, and within the hour of it sitting in the parking lot, the batteries had drained enough that it was cranking slowly and wouldn't start. They called me and I made sure they weren't messing around with the lights or something and left them on, and they assured me that they didn't.
So this morning I came in ready to start diagnosing some issues. I thought after doing some research on this site it could be a grounding issue, voltage regulator issue, or an alternator issue. First thing I did was fired it up and let it sit and run for about a half hour just to get it all warmed up and make sure the alternator had time to charge the batteries back up. It cranked slowly, but it did fire on its own. After the 30 minute idle, things are back to normal and it cranks up with full power.
So here is where my questions come in. When taking a volt meter to the batteries while the vehicle is not running, one of the batteries is reading 12.9 volts, and the other battery is reading 11.3 volts. While the vehicle is running the battery that was reading 12.9 volts jumps to closer to 16 volts, while the other battery only jumps to about 11.6 volts. When checking them together without the vehicle running, the batteries are reading 24 volts, and when running, ready pretty close to 28 volts.
Now I am all new to 24v systems, so I may be going about this completely wrong. I am trying to figure out why the power fluctuates on initial start up after sitting for a day or 2. Am I going about this the right way with my diagnosis?
Any input would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!
Recently we acquired a '92 Humvee and it was in great condition mechanically and cosmetically. When we first acquired it, the truck was a little sluggish to crank and fire, but it did so just fine. I was planning on adding a bunch of electronics to it for some testing purposes, so I decided to just go ahead an swap out the batteries. I went ahead and installed 2 new Optima yellow tops, and rewired them the same way the old ones came out. Everything was completely fine, except for the battery voltage gauge would jump around on initial start up. It jumps around for about 5 minutes before settling down and stays solidly in the green right where it needs to be. Now if its night time and the headlights are on, they flicker with the gauge jumping around, but once everything settles down, they stay nice and steady. Being that this was just a test vehicle for us to develop some products for, I didn't think much of it as even if it sat for a week or 2, it would crank right up no issues and not even slightly sluggish.
Fast forward to last week, some coworkers took it to lunch, and within the hour of it sitting in the parking lot, the batteries had drained enough that it was cranking slowly and wouldn't start. They called me and I made sure they weren't messing around with the lights or something and left them on, and they assured me that they didn't.
So this morning I came in ready to start diagnosing some issues. I thought after doing some research on this site it could be a grounding issue, voltage regulator issue, or an alternator issue. First thing I did was fired it up and let it sit and run for about a half hour just to get it all warmed up and make sure the alternator had time to charge the batteries back up. It cranked slowly, but it did fire on its own. After the 30 minute idle, things are back to normal and it cranks up with full power.
So here is where my questions come in. When taking a volt meter to the batteries while the vehicle is not running, one of the batteries is reading 12.9 volts, and the other battery is reading 11.3 volts. While the vehicle is running the battery that was reading 12.9 volts jumps to closer to 16 volts, while the other battery only jumps to about 11.6 volts. When checking them together without the vehicle running, the batteries are reading 24 volts, and when running, ready pretty close to 28 volts.
Now I am all new to 24v systems, so I may be going about this completely wrong. I am trying to figure out why the power fluctuates on initial start up after sitting for a day or 2. Am I going about this the right way with my diagnosis?
Any input would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!