Re: Incorrect Battery Charging Voltage?
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Re: Incorrect Battery Charging Voltage?
| Abeness | 07 Sep 2004 16:23 |
> If your boltage reads 12.7 with motor off, motor on, and motor revved up a > little, then you alternator is toast. 13.2V is a bare minimum and it should have > that at idle of just above. 12.7 means a fully charged battery. Do Honda's have voltage regulators? ISTR that a dead voltage regulator could lead to the appearance of a dead alternator in 80s GM cars, but I may be misremembering.
Abe
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| Rex B | 07 Sep 2004 14:46 |
||1991 Civic LX 4-door sedan, 1.5 Liter, manual transmission, no air conditioning, ||156k miles, here. [quoted text clipped - 31 lines] ||battery isn't going to be maintained at optimal charge and so, as winter ||approaches, I need to fix this. Caroline If your boltage reads 12.7 with motor off, motor on, and motor revved up a little, then you alternator is toast. 13.2V is a bare minimum and it should have that at idle of just above. 12.7 means a fully charged battery.
Texas Parts Guy
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| Caroline | 07 Sep 2004 02:54 |
1991 Civic LX 4-door sedan, 1.5 Liter, manual transmission, no air conditioning, 156k miles, here.
Voltage at the battery terminals when the car is -- idling = about 12.7 volts -- stopped, ignition off, also about 12.7 volts
In February, these numbers were 14.5 volts and 12. 4 volts.
Internet sources say a voltage when the car is idling of around 14 volts or so indicates a properly operating charging system. So something is wrong, IMO.
I put in a new battery (Interstate) today, replacing the old one (4-years-old; Diehard; wrong climate design as I moved from up North to the Southwest in the past year?). The voltages above didn't change.
The car is on its second alternator (OEM). This 2nd alternator is 5 years and 50k miles old.
I installed a new alternator belt in June. I originally had the belt too loose, as indicated by a squeal at cold startup. I tightened it and the squeal stopped. Unfortunately I did not at this time check the battery terminal voltage.
I did shake out quite a lot of white powder (indicating some corrosion) from the battery's positive terminal's cable connector while changing the batteries.
I'm going to do the checks at http://www.honda.co.uk/owner/ConcertoManual/62sk301/16-66.pdf this weekend.
Meanwhile, has anyone seen a condition like this? If so, what was the fix?
I think this is not critical unless I do a lot of driving with the lights on (which I do not, as I drive mostly during daylight hours). But I do feel my battery isn't going to be maintained at optimal charge and so, as winter approaches, I need to fix this.
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