No, there is no +,-. However the two field terminals in reality are just one very very long piece of wire wrapped around the armature, but insulated from it electrically.
Make sure both wires are disconnected from the field terminals, ohm's check the two field terminals together as I mentioned and then double check that, with one ohmmeter lead connected to one of the field terminals you have no continuity to the outter case! Infinate resistance is what you are looking for as far as grounding out to the case.
Well sir-0.0 ohms @ 1 FLD connection to alt case,and 3.4 ohms on the other FLD connection to alt case.
So something in the alt is fried-yes?
If so-why would the alternator still be putting out higher voltage than the battery has?
Making progress though.
I have an old alternator that i tested with the ohm meter,and it shows that the ohms are OL. I think i may slap that one on real quick and give it a whirl.
Making progress i think.
You guys aint going to believe this!The old alternator works just fine!New alternator does not work!
What started this whole mess was the batt not charging-right?So i took the old alt in and had it tested-Right?Dude behind the counter tests it-tells me its no good-Right?
So i buy a new one-guess what,it dont work.Well It might have worked once,but the wires going to and from the alt were wired all wrong,so maybe that fried the alternator?
But why did it not fry the old alternator?Dont know..
Bottom line is old alternator is now wired up by the diagrams you gentlemen provided me,
and engine idling i now have 14.2v,and at half throttle it is at 14.4.
Now if the car dont burn down because of some other wiring issue.....
Any way-I would not have gotten this thing fixed with out the help of you guys.If you are ever in Nor cal-you are coming over for beer and brats!
Thanks so much Rob and Nothingbutdarts.You guys rock!:notworth:
OK, voltage drops with the engine running means it's not charging at all. Voltage should go up 1 to 2 volts with the engine running dependant on engine speed. Do you have any indication on your ammeter? If no, or discharge, you just confirmed what I said.
360 engine, or ballast resistor voltage does not have any effect here. Did you keep the 69 318 alternator, or did you use the alternator that came with the 360? If you replaced the alternator, did you specify the 69 318 version, or did you go with the 360 and model/year of the donor. Big difference in voltage regulators here and they are not compatible. Also check that your alternator output is making it back to the battery. Problems here can be the ammeter, or the firewall connectors.
check for +12V at the heavy red wire at the alternator with the engine not running. (It should be present). Make sure the important engine to firewall ground strap is intact.
Try this troubleshooting guide;
http://www.mymopar.com/index.php?pid=78
Here's a wiring diagram for your car;
http://www.mymopar.com/downloads/1969/69BarracudaA.jpg
http://www.mymopar.com/downloads/1969/69BarracudaB.jpg
No no no... you still need the main feed to go inside the car for power for all the interior and lights (that will be the old wiring). Basically you end up with two routes, one that goes through the bulkhead, inside for your accessories (including gauges, radio, lights, etc.) and then the new loop that bypasses the interior and goes straight to the battery for charging. They both end up at the starter relay. You just relieved having ALL the power having to go through the bulkhead.
See the diagram I modified.. the red wire from the alternator is that "new" wire. Make sense?