1963 Valiant. Slant 170 w/ turbocharger, MSD6 BTM, 400W stereo system. Bought it that way and power never seemed to be an issue. No idea what alternator was in there but it was a round back with only one field wire running from an old style voltage regulator (black box). Maybe that means it was a 30A model? There is a switched 12V line run down there but its taped up and not used. ANyway, it ran great that way until the alternator died. The autozone replacement is a 60A squareback with 2 field connections. I read about upgrading the regulator so I put in a C8313. I hooked it up like the old one (one field wire, ignore the other terminal, it doesn't charge. Figured I got a bum alternator so I took it back and got another of the same with same result. Did some reading and it looks like I need to apply switched 12V to the other field terminal as so many diagrams say to, but then I get smoking wires when I hit the ignition! I tested the C8313 and I get the right resistance (1.75k ohms) but when I tried testing it by applying 20V from a drill battery to the blue terminal and watching for the green side to go to ground, it only seems to work if I reverse the terminals (power to green, blue goes to ground). But if I swap the blue/green wires in the car, I still get smoke so I'm not sure if that even matters. Due to all the smoked wires, I ended up pulling the dual ballast out cuz it got super hot too and just connecting al the power wires together. Maybe that was a bad idea but I had trouble figuring out why I needed the ballast. With the ignition off I measure less than an ohm resistance to ground from either field terminal so that makes sense that I'm basically putting 12V to ground and getting smoke. Does that mean this alternator is bad out of the box or is ti supposed to be that way? If so how does it makes sense to apply a voltage?? I feel like I'm following red herrings all over the place and missing some basic detail.















