71 demon. Replacement oem alternator. Yes a painless new wiring harness. He did a great job very clean solid connections. Every wire replaced. New fuse box two new circuit breakers. new autometer gauge set. The only ground I see to the vr is that it is bolted to the body. I have three vr’s one ohms out at 3.0, one is able to be adjusted and the lowest I can get it is to 1.67 ohms. The original vr ohms out at 1.50. The battery was relocated to trunk. There is a ground directly to head and a ground from there to fender. It is a solid half inch conductor. The ignition switch was replaced because the one in the steering column was definitely worn out. So new remote starter switch as well. It idles at 13.75 but any throttle brings it up to 15v but full throttle or even quarter throttle it will hit 16 and I shut it down now. At the battery I measured 14.1 volts at idle
Thank you very much
Again, this could be as simple as a drop right in the ignition switch. Realize that the sensing for Mopars is in the IGN lead to the VR, as there is no separate sensing. Any drop at any point in the path from the battery, through the harness, connectors/ terminals, switch, and finally to the VR IGN terminal (including the ground circuit) will result in overcharge.
THERE IS A SMALL chance that you have a battery problem.
Go back to where I talked about VR drop
1...With key in "run" and engine stopped, you need to build an extension wire, and this can be small like 18, to go from the battery positive post right at the battery, clear up front to the VR. Hook one end of your meter to your extension wire. Hook the other end of your meter to the VR IGN terminal or as close as you can get, AKA the switch end of the ballast resistor if you are using one, or the blue field wire to the alternator. You will now be measuring the drop to the VR all the way from battery pos. to that point. You want to see as low a reading as possible, and again whatever that reads will be added to the VR set point. Make this reading WITHOUT disconnecting anything, such as the alternator field or VR
If that reading is reasonable, "let's say" .3V or so, I would try to temp swap in a known good battery, and or try yet another STOCK VR.
You can also measure drop in the ground circuit. This would also require an extension wire for your meter. Clamp your extension wire direct to the neg terminal of the battery. This is harder with a system acting up.
Now with engine running at fast idle, and you are going to have to regulate this so the system is not running more than say, 15V, Connect your meter to the extension wire to neg battery, and then stab the other probe hard into the VR mounting flange. The reading you'd like to see is very low, zero volts. would be perfect This will show whether with charging current in the system, that the VR actually has a good ground path to the battery neg.
Basically, you want to make this test first with any accessories such as headlights, heater, etc off, and again with these loads activated.