Austin Spencer
Well-Known Member
I've recently bought a 65 Dart GT Convertible, and going through the list of issues it had and fixing them, and I'm up on the charging system since when I first got it, it wasn't charging. I checked voltages at the alternator and battery and figured it wasn't putting anything out, so I bought a new alternator and I've got the same issue.
I've read about the differences with the single field alternator and voltage regulator with one wire going to the field, and also the dual field with the newer voltage regulator. I've now got both styles of alternator, one with 2 field tabs that are both non-grounded, and one with a field tab and a grounded tab. My Dart has the older mechanical style voltage regulator, one dark blue wire going in from the ballast resistor, and one dark green going out to the field tab. My older alternator was the correct style for that voltage regulator, and wasn't working, so I swapped the new one on, did some reading, and read that you can ground one of the field terminals on the newer style alternators to get it to work. I didn't want that as a permanent fix but decided to try to test it, and I also got nothing.
From my limited understanding, the voltage regulator essentially sends out pulses that average to around 14v, depending on what the system needs, and so based on what the field wire has it changes what the alternator puts out. Is there a way to check if my voltage regulator is bad? I've got 12v switched power at the blue line from the ballast, but with the key in run, whether the engine was running or not, I had no voltage at the green wire, so I'd suspect it was the voltage regulator not putting anything to the field wire.
I've also noticed on many of the voltage regulators online to buy, they have 2 rods on the underside, and the one that came on this car when I bought it does not have those. Just curious as to what those are.
Since I have both styles of alternator now, would it be better to swap to the newer 2 field wire voltage regulator? Or should I get the same older style VR and stick with that?
I've read about the differences with the single field alternator and voltage regulator with one wire going to the field, and also the dual field with the newer voltage regulator. I've now got both styles of alternator, one with 2 field tabs that are both non-grounded, and one with a field tab and a grounded tab. My Dart has the older mechanical style voltage regulator, one dark blue wire going in from the ballast resistor, and one dark green going out to the field tab. My older alternator was the correct style for that voltage regulator, and wasn't working, so I swapped the new one on, did some reading, and read that you can ground one of the field terminals on the newer style alternators to get it to work. I didn't want that as a permanent fix but decided to try to test it, and I also got nothing.
From my limited understanding, the voltage regulator essentially sends out pulses that average to around 14v, depending on what the system needs, and so based on what the field wire has it changes what the alternator puts out. Is there a way to check if my voltage regulator is bad? I've got 12v switched power at the blue line from the ballast, but with the key in run, whether the engine was running or not, I had no voltage at the green wire, so I'd suspect it was the voltage regulator not putting anything to the field wire.
I've also noticed on many of the voltage regulators online to buy, they have 2 rods on the underside, and the one that came on this car when I bought it does not have those. Just curious as to what those are.
Since I have both styles of alternator now, would it be better to swap to the newer 2 field wire voltage regulator? Or should I get the same older style VR and stick with that?















