flash7210 wrote:
Well, if the voltage regulator on a KJ is external from the alternator (i.e. in the PCM) then the
alternator can be tested on the bench at any auto parts store.
That old Lincoln you mentioned (with external regulator), when bench tested, will put out a
un-regulated 18-25 volts.
Therefore, the same should hold true for our KJ.
So, if the alternator tests good on the bench, how do you fix the regulator?
IIRC, the old Lincoln alternator put out something like what the magneto on my motorcycle does now - In excess of 30 volts at idle, 80+ at 4000 rpm. (Granted the Lincoln never would spin that fast, I'm just making an inference on that) but the theory is the same: Raw windings generating completely unregulated power. The difference is that on the bike, the primary on the rotor is a set of permanent magnets, so it is always on. Just like a lawnmower - start it up and it is making juice, as long as it spins. What you DO with that power is the problem, when you have too much. Hence burning the headlight, instead of overcharging the battery.
In our case, the "regulator" in the PCM is supplying a voltage to the primary to turn it on and off. This works because the primary on the rotor is an electromagnet.
I did some thinking about this today while driving around, and I think I now understand why the service manual refers to the PCM circuit as a regulator, even though in the strictest sense, it isn't stepping down the final stator winding voltages.
Everything about this is simple electron physics, manipulated to make power. A transformer for a cellphone does the same function as our alternators do, (magnetically inducing voltages) but does it without moving parts. One set of windings has a lot of wraps, the other has just a few. The rotor on our alternator (by physical space limitations) can't have that many windings, and we already know it cannot carry much voltage b/c it is coming direct from the PCM.
But... On a cellphone transformer, both voltages are constant, based on the supply side. IF the PCM was acting as more than just an on/off binary system, but was instead ramping that rotor voltage according to some scale, say a 5-to-10 volt input... Then the magnetic field strength would ALSO vary, so a very small change in the input voltage (easy for electronics to accomplish) would equal very large (comparatively) changes in the output voltage.
This would then eliminate the type of step-down circuits that my motorcycle has, and would only require the bridge rectifier in the alternator like TJKJ suggested, so that the output power direct to the charge pin was ready to use.
The parts store test bench will most likely only provide the "full field" voltage (probably 12v, but that is a guess) to the rotor field pin on the alternator, and if the field is fully operational (no bad brush like I suspect might be the root cause of the problem) then you should get ~14v out of the charge pin...
They can test it, PCM regulator or not.