Just as a curio item, when I took apart my 1970 instrument panel, the little stamped sheetmetal faces of the oil, temp and fuel gauges were stamped steel. The similar looking ALT gauge was stamped aluminum. Something to do with magnetic fields?
you see it peg 40 and you turn on the headlights and that generally corrects things. If not shut the bugger off.
Looks like amp meter is the next oil thread here..![]()
Just as a curio item, when I took apart my 1970 instrument panel, the little stamped sheetmetal faces of the oil, temp and fuel gauges were stamped steel. The similar looking ALT gauge was stamped aluminum. Something to do with magnetic fields?
They are effectively the same gauge, just different face plates. The operation is the same no matter which one you use....in case anyone gets stuck for one of the other.![]()
I’ll never understand where this kind of misinformation comes from. If you want to understand this charging system as originally designed, read some of the numerous threads here that contain the facts.I’ll never understand the logic behind an ammeter in the system as the entire system load goes through it.
They beat up from loose connections and not having a fusible link. I hear from people all the time how I goona burn up my car but get no response when I ask who they know personally that had there car actually burn down from a failed device.
not the entire system load, but the load coming in and out from batt... read the thread with the poll
Yes, I know and said that earlier... (*I Think* could have been another thread.) On my A bodies, and some other cars, it is located behind the power booster or just to the left near the bulk head. I guess it depends on year to year, model to model.They do have a fusible link. Usually is right off the starter relay stud on the hot feed to it. Ron
Oh! It can happen, I have no doubt, I just never met anyone that actually had a fire due to a bad amp meter. But everybody seems to know someone.... or at least someone’s second wife’s third removed adopted Cousin.So the bottom line is ????? Ammeters never cause underhood fires ? Fake News ? The factories discontinued using them for no good reason?
This I don’t understand. Sarcasm?50 year old electrical systems never fail. Some people have all the luck and some don't ? Electrical items are good until they are bad. "But the light bulb worked the last time I turned it on." I don't understand...
Yes, I know and said that earlier... (*I Think* could have been another thread.) On my A bodies, and some other cars, it is located behind the power booster or just to the left near the bulk head. I guess it depends on year to year, model to model.
So if you have a battery failure or an alternator failure, then full system load is running through the Ammeter? I’m no sparky, but assuming you leave it as factory wired, you’ll be fine, but once you add anything on, you’re risking potential disaster. If you add an aftermarket ignition system and run it off the battery, it’s passing more charging load back through the ammeter.I’ll never understand where this kind of misinformation comes from. If you want to understand this charging system as originally designed, read some of the numerous threads here that contain the facts.
Well aware and it’s obvious that I accept full responsibility for all aspects of my ride. As you can see, I’m well past worrying about ammeters as mine is gone! However, these cars get modified and also driven by people that don’t know anything about electrical let alone where to even find the ammeter on the dashboard so if that alternator fails, it might get driven until the battery is dead before it gets looked at... the potential is there and if you plan on modifying these cars extensively, the first thing to do is get rid of the stock wiring arrangement.If you have an alt or batt failure and you still keep running the car no matter if the ammeter read or not the full load, you have the responsibility on don’t keep running the car under a major failure and don’t blame the ammeter
And in any case if you still decide to run under a major failure, the ammeter will let you know what you can or not make to keep the system safe.
if you decide to add anything on the stock system will be your responsability to make it right, and don’t blame the ammeter anymore.
Run an ignition system ( or ANYTHING) straight to the batt is one of the wrong procedures for example. And then don’t blame the ammeter!
( actually ignition systems doesn’t add excessive loads even sourcing them from battery )
Every MSD system instructions, as well as every EFI system instruct you to run primary power and ground direct to the battery.If you have an alt or batt failure and you still keep running the car no matter if the ammeter read or not the full load, you have the responsibility on don’t keep running the car under a major failure and don’t blame the ammeter.
And in any case if you still decide to run under a major failure, the ammeter will let you know what you can or not make to keep the system safe.
if your engine overheats, won’t be the temp gauge or sender blame. Except if they get a wrong reading for some damage on gauge, wire or sender.
if you decide to add anything on the stock system will be your responsability to make it right, and don’t blame the ammeter anymore.
Run an ignition system ( or ANYTHING) straight to the batt is one of the wrong procedures for example. And then don’t blame the ammeter!
( actually ignition systems doesn’t add excessive loads even sourcing them from battery anyway )