Yes those two wires are running through the firewall through drilled holes that the previous owner did I’m assuming.
Yes see if you can trace where they go or come from. In my opinion those are short circuits waiting to happen.
Next the alt main wire is running in a loom all the way across the back firewall so the 2 wires that are separate and running through the fire wall I would assume one is the alt wire.
The heavy alternator wire looks factory and yes it runs along th einside of the valve covers and then across the back of the engine bay all wrppped into a harness. Its probably 12 gage. If its 12 ga its the standard alternator output wire and should go to the bulkhead multiconnector postion P.
If it had the 60 or 65 amp alternator wiring, or came with a rear defrost grid, then there should be 8 gage wire and goes to a grommet like the one you pictured.
When reading the factory diagrams.
R is for alteRnator wires
A is code for bAttery wire
J is code for Ignition. J1 feeds the key switch, so its more than just ignition.
L is for lights
H is for Horn
S is for Start and since yours is a '74, the seatbelt interlock made the start circuits more complicated.
The red wire running though is the 30amp fuse wire I have traced that to the back of ammeter. So I guess I will have to open some of the electrical tape wires up and that loom to see if that black wire is the alt. So where I’m confused is the diagram you posted up there shows the red wire from the stater relay with a fuseable link going though the circuit to the left side of the gauge if you are looking at it head on.
See no reason to open it up if its original wrap. Other harnesses we see a previous owner used split wire loom. So those you can peek in if you want.
The black wire to the ammeter is coded as an alternator output wire probably because the way the harness evolved from 1960. It also makes it very clear which wire to connect to which ammeter terminal.
The diagram I posted is a schematic. The purpose of a schematic is to show how the circuits work. The bundling, routing and hookups go in all sorts of directions to protect the wires and make the connections without strain.
The photo I posted of my ammeter gauge the red wire is on the inner post is that correct?
On the instrument panel the red wire with ring terminal connects to the ammeter post with the R next to it. The black one with ring terminal goes on the other post. Always.
I really want to bypass this ammeter so I already know about the alt to stater relay the question is how do I do the ammeter side.
I won't help on that. Like I wrote above. That advice is poison. Nothing to do with the problem(s), and if anything is going to make it more difficult to solve.
Should I remove that 30amp fuse and put a 16 guage fuseable link in where that 30amp inline fuse is ?
Returning it to factory may solve the problem. Eventually you should do so.
I can't say just do it because something happened that caused a previous owner to put a fuse in. Most likely the fusible link failed. Was this due to a short? or overloading the circuit with modifications/add ons? or charging a dead battery by running the car? We can only make some guesses.
The connections on the ammeter don't look burnt or melted. That's tells us that if there was an overload, it was brief and the fusebale link failed quick.
The fact the 30 amp fuse is blowing suggests either a short, or your new battery is very low on charge.
Observe the ammeter after starting and if the needle swings above 20 amps charge, then the battery is low and/or the votlage regulation may be full fielding.
If the needle swings to past 20 amps discharge, then there is a short.