Posted November 30, 20177 yr Can I Test for AC ribble with my Fluke multi meter? My local Alternator/ starter repair shop can check it again but I have to remove my alt. from my truck because he only does bench testing He also said there will always be some slight AC ripple. Is that true? . Edited November 30, 20177 yr by GSP7
November 30, 20177 yr Author What's that ? Mike had a video, "How to check a Dodge Ram Alternator for AC waveform" but the video is disabled or errored
November 30, 20177 yr @GSP7 well you must have broken youtube hahaha Yes you can with a fluke set it to .000 ac resolution
November 30, 20177 yr Author I cant remember exactly how to do it. You test DC volts and then turn the meter dial to AC and the numbers need to be a certain value or less? Or some chit ? ? .
November 30, 20177 yr set the meter to ac with resolution to 0.000v ac. measure power on the alternator charge lead to ground and see what value it reports. I think anything over 0.03 is a fail on the diodes
December 1, 20177 yr When I replaced mine last spring it was .05 so I had the parts house test it and confirmed. They tested the new one and it passed and they told me that anything over .01 was a failure on their tester.
December 1, 20177 yr Author From ME78's link, Mikes post Quote Normal output of the alternator is 13.5 to 14.5 volts DC but when flipped over to AC Volts it should never rise above 0.1 volts AC. .01 or .10 ??? Edited December 1, 20177 yr by GSP7
December 1, 20177 yr I thought .03 was the highest you would want so I am confused now. Edited December 1, 20177 yr by dripley
December 1, 20177 yr Staff The article (above link) says .1 it's a fail. Why can't we just move them diodes outside the alternator so we can just pop in a new bridge whenever the Trans goes hunting? Maybe bad questioning here, but a cool AC ripple gauge would also be handy in the cab. Edited December 1, 20177 yr by JAG1
December 1, 20177 yr 6 hours ago, JAG1 said: The article (above link) says .1 it's a fail. Why can't we just move them diodes outside the alternator so we can just pop in a new bridge whenever the Trans goes hunting? Maybe bad questioning here, but a cool AC ripple gauge would also be handy in the cab. Great ideas, quick change diodes L8tr D
December 1, 20177 yr Owner Originally I post 0.1 VAC would be a fail but under different circumstances, some people were getting issues below that number. So the 0.05 marginal number pops. Basically, if you can test and reach or pass the 0.05 (50 mv AC) I suggest having the alternator bench tested to verify if it bad or not. Because ever truck has different loads during the test and there is no way to accurately load the alternator from test to test so that why I suggest all load off hoping to even out the loads and get a test number we can all play by. 10 to 30 mV (0.01 to 0.03) is a normally good alternator. 50 mV (0.05) is getting marginal bench testing is advised. 100 mV (0.1) is failing. Bench testing is still strongly advised to verify the alternator. Once you fail both your test and then a bench test you can safely say the alternator diodes are done. Now the replaces are here on the site. Edited December 1, 20177 yr by Mopar1973Man
December 1, 20177 yr Staff I think there is some problem with trusting the bench test guys, so knowing what a good DVM says while running in the truck is a better option and if you have to go that far to pull out the alternator for the test you may as well just change the diode Bridge and be done with it. The problem is if you change the bridge and the DVM says still too high of AC ripple then you have to remove again and change brushes and possible slip rings. Even though changing the diode bridge is going to solve most problems, as I understand it, you have a little better stab if you replace the brushes too I suppose. So where do you go for brushes? Edited December 1, 20177 yr by JAG1
December 3, 20177 yr Author The Alt/Starter motor shop guy that tested my alt.,months ago,actually tested the diodes pack its self. It had one bad diode I just tested my rebuilt alt with new diode pack and brushes with my Fluke meter,,, Cold motor in the AM just fired up ,,, It is .029 - .03 ish Good to go for my "new" ECM when it gets here . Edited December 3, 20177 yr by GSP7
December 8, 20177 yr Owner 16 minutes ago, rogerash0 said: Moparman will that denso replacement unit work on any alternator or ? Design strictly for the Denso alternators on the Dodge Ram truck. I'm not sure of any other applications it might fit.
July 31, 20195 yr 02 dodge diesel, had alternator bench tested it showed that it passed. Battery volts 14.69 ripple volts .39 did it really pass noise level.
August 1, 20195 yr No. Not at .39. Read the article posted above. You want to preferably see .05 or less.
August 1, 20195 yr Staff Yes .05 or less is good according to Moparman. Sorry about my comment you can't trust bench tests.... I don't really know thats true for sure.
August 1, 20195 yr Owner Depends. Full load ripple is going to be much higher typically the local NAPA passright right around 1.0 volts AC at full load 136 Amps. Idling engine and no load with DVM you want to be 50mV AC or less. Output voltage is meaningless. It the ripple voltage that is critical here.
Can I Test for AC ribble with my Fluke multi meter?
My local Alternator/ starter repair shop can check it again but I have to remove my alt. from my truck because he only does bench testing
He also said there will always be some slight AC ripple. Is that true?
.
Edited by GSP7