New Alternator Burning

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

efiste

I recently completed an upgrade of my original 1987 Catalina Motorola 55 AMP internally regulated alternator with the C34 project Electrical Upgrade recommendation of a Blue Circle 100 AMP alternator (perfect fit rebuilt alternator) and a new Balmar 3 stage external regulator. After many checks and heavy expectation of a wiring issue, the wiring appears to be correct. I have also connected the AO directly to the battery bank with a #2 wire. I have checked the voltages of the regulator and the alternator with expected outputs. Twice now, though, the alternator has overheated (quickly way too hot to touch), started to burn, and fried the diodes (perhaps not in that order). This occurred once with partially depleted batteries (4 T105s in series-parallel) and once after fully charged. After the local alternator shop replaced the diodes the first time, I completed some more further testing after the alternator was re-installed while connected to shore power and charging the batteries at various RPMs. Everything seemed to work correctly, no burn smell, and the expected voltage output. As soon as I left the dock and kicked up some RPMs, I could smell the alternator burning and then noticed the voltage drop to battery voltage.

I believe the new external regulator is working and the alternator seemed okay at first and then fixed, checked again to be working correctly. I certainly think that if I get the alternator fixed again, the same situation will occur. The only thing that "I think" occurs differently from when it has worked until it fails is:

1) connected to shore power and charging the batteries (this may or may not have been the case during the first failure)
2) slightly longer run time at higher RPMs (after leaving the dock)

I was heading out on a one week vacation on the boat, so I ran the engine with the key off after starting the engine to cut out the alternator output. I kept my batteries charged with a Honda geni and shore power while away. While continuing to diagnosis the issue, I fairly quickly slightly smell the burning from the alternator if I leave the key on after starting the engine. As expected, there is no charging voltage coming from the alternator.

Any thoughts on what might be causing this? I am at a loss unless there is actually a failure of the alternator or regulator which I do not think is likely the issue. The marina yard mechanics are also at a loss, but their skills (or patience to resolve an issue) are sometimes questionable.

Kyle Ewing

Do you have a battery monitor to tell how much current the alternator is putting out?  I had almost the exact same problem when I installed the Blue Circle alternator and external regulator.  Short term I opened the alternator door to improve cooling and put it in "small engine mode."  Long term I added the temperature sensor and haven't had a problem, since.

Also, make sure the belt tension is correct.  I've been told too tight and the bearings can cause heat.  Too loose and a slipping belt can cause heat.


Kyle Ewing
Donnybrook #1010
Belmont Harbor, Chicago
http://www.saildonnybrook.com/

efiste

I checked the belt tension pretty closely, and it seemed right. As for the battery monitor, I checked the voltage after installing the repaired alternator. It was putting out the voltage as expected. I did not have a monitor on it when it failed because I thought it was in the clear. I was considering jumping the regulator into Small Engine Mode and possibly adding the temperature sensor due to running hot issues reported by others. It just seems that it should not be getting that hot that fast and burning out the alternator. The second time it failed, it was within a few minutes of running the RPMs at 2500 or so. Further, the batteries were fully charged so presumably the regulator should have been calling for little output. It was also running for some time (30 minutes) at a slow idle before without any visible issue. I read a lot of posts regarding the heat that this setup (100 AMP alternator, 3-stage regulator) can cause following the first failure, but none of those posts talked about the alternator getting so hot that it started smoking and fried.

Is that what happened in your experience?

It is annoying and a chore to get the alternator off, take it somewhere to be repaired, pick it up, and re-install it. I am hoping to avoid a lot of guess and check. I see you are in Chicago like me. I have taken an alternator to P & G Keene Electrical in Bridgeview before. they do a good job, but maybe you have another place you recommend. Thanks for the feedback.

Eric

Ron Hill

#3
ef : You need to call Balmar (360)435-6100 and tell them your problem.
The alternator only puts out what the voltage regular tells it to, after sensing the state(charge level) of the battery bank.

It almost sounds to me that the voltage regulator is "seeing" very low or 0 voltage!! 
Ron, Apache #788

mainesail

A 450 Ah bank of wets will take more than the BC alt can dish out. When the alt heats up it puts out even less thus requiring even longer at max output. AGM & Gel batteries also very often fry alts that don't cool well.

The simple fix is to add the Balmar temp sensor for the alternator and go into belt manager and dial back the field % so the alt can never run at full output.... This alt likely does not dissipate heat as well as it should.
-Maine Sail
Casco Bay, ME
Boat - CS-36T

https://marinehowto.com/

mainesail

#5
Quote from: efiste on July 09, 2012, 11:43:16 AM
I checked the belt tension pretty closely, and it seemed right. As for the battery monitor, I checked the voltage after installing the repaired alternator. It was putting out the voltage as expected. I did not have a monitor on it when it failed because I thought it was in the clear. I was considering jumping the regulator into Small Engine Mode and possibly adding the temperature sensor due to running hot issues reported by others. It just seems that it should not be getting that hot that fast and burning out the alternator. The second time it failed, it was within a few minutes of running the RPMs at 2500 or so. Further, the batteries were fully charged so presumably the regulator should have been calling for little output. It was also running for some time (30 minutes) at a slow idle before without any visible issue. I read a lot of posts regarding the heat that this setup (100 AMP alternator, 3-stage regulator) can cause following the first failure, but none of those posts talked about the alternator getting so hot that it started smoking and fried.

Is that what happened in your experience?

It is annoying and a chore to get the alternator off, take it somewhere to be repaired, pick it up, and re-install it. I am hoping to avoid a lot of guess and check. I see you are in Chicago like me. I have taken an alternator to P & G Keene Electrical in Bridgeview before. they do a good job, but maybe you have another place you recommend. Thanks for the feedback.

Eric


Eric,

We really need more information on exactly how this is wired and installed. Where is the alt sense wire, battery switch, alt output wire, etc. etc...? If the batts were in-fact fully charged there should be no way you burned up the alt due to temp from load acceptance..

It is sounding a lot like an install problem? We also need specifics. Statements such as "voltage expected" tells us very little and we ideally need to know what the regulator is programmed for, all settings, where all the wires go, alt ground wire, terminals on the back of the BC alt etc. etc...

Why are you turning off the key with the engine running? Do you have a combiner, Echo charger etc.??
-Maine Sail
Casco Bay, ME
Boat - CS-36T

https://marinehowto.com/

Bobg

#6
I can understand your frustration, maybe you just have a defective alternator. I bought a 55 amp mando Alternator from Harvey at Blue Circle,  he is just down the road from me in WI, it was defective out of the box, when the batteries needed a charge, the alternator would heat up so hot it would seize.
I took it to my local auto electric shop, he said a alternator cannot seize electrically, he tested it and was able to put a load on it. it started to heat up like on the boat, and when we took it apart, we found the rotor was  rubbing on the case when it would heat up while charging.  This only occurred when the battery's were low, like after a night on the hook.  If I disconnected the AO, the alternator would run cool, course it wasn't putting out any amperage.  
I took it back to blue circle twice, we couldn't duplicate the problem with Harveys testing equipment, he didn't have any way to put a load on the alternator to simulate charging.  it wouldn't heat up in his shop,   so he couldn't justify a refund

weeks of head scratching, buying new batteries, running new wire, and smelling that hot alternator,  it boiled down to the bad alternator from Blue Circle. I bought the identical alternator from my local electric shop,  and life was good again.  However I did learn a lot.
Bob Gatz, 1988 catalina 34, Hull#818, "Ghostrider" sail lake superior Apostle Islands

Steve Sayian

My original Mando failed last year and new one is also heating up when I put the selcetor switch on "ALL".

My buddy has a 55 amp alternator (not a Mando) and he charges 2-4D's and a Gp-27 starting battery and his is nice and cool.

His alternator cost about $350.00 and the Mando was $125.00. 

Going to replace the Mondo with a higher grade unit.
Steve Sayian
"Ocean Rose"
1999 Mk II
Wing, Std Rig, Kiwi Prop
#1448, Hingham, Mass

mainesail

Quote from: Bobg on July 09, 2012, 10:24:49 PM
I can understand your frustration, maybe you just have a defective alternator. I bought a 55 amp mando Alternator from Harvey at Blue Circle,  he is just down the road from me in WI, it was defective out of the box, when the batteries needed a charge, the alternator would heat up so hot it would seize.
I took it to my local auto electric shop, he said a alternator cannot seize electrically, he tested it and was able to put a load on it. it started to heat up like on the boat, and when we took it apart, we found the rotor was  rubbing on the case when it would heat up while charging.  This only occurred when the battery's were low, like after a night on the hook.  If I disconnected the AO, the alternator would run cool, course it wasn't putting out any amperage.  
I took it back to blue circle twice, we couldn't duplicate the problem with Harveys testing equipment, he didn't have any way to put a load on the alternator to simulate charging.  it wouldn't heat up in his shop,   so he couldn't justify a refund



Pardon me for finding the humor in this.. A guy is selling "High Output" alternators but has no means of testing them??? How can an alternator shop not have a load testing machine especially if selling high output alternators for marine use??
-Maine Sail
Casco Bay, ME
Boat - CS-36T

https://marinehowto.com/

Bobg

blue circle charged $180.00 for a new mando, but he still wanted my old motorola for exchange.  The one I bought from my auto electric shop cost $130.00 no exchange.  Yeah, I was somewhat miffed.   as far as the testing equipment, it was a electric motor running my alternator with a belt, the AO connected to a battery, I am sure he could test it enough to show output to see if it was working at all. like at a auto shop. Maybe he tests high output alternators some other way, or someone else somewhere else does it. Or maybe he knows what they need to make 100 amps when he builds them I don't know.  I am just saying what he had for me.

At my local Electric shop, they  really had a fancy machine, he took the pully off and bolted the alternator directly to it, it had a dial to simulate any load you needed to put on there.
Bob Gatz, 1988 catalina 34, Hull#818, "Ghostrider" sail lake superior Apostle Islands

efiste

I am going to take the alternator in to be checked out. It has to be removed to be repaired or replaced anyway. I have a very good shop around that I have used before (not the ones that fixed it after the first failure) who should be able to load test it to determine if the problem is with the BC alternator. I should have some information back by Thursday or Friday. In the meantime, I have also ordered a Balmar alternator temperature sensor. This seems prudent anyway regardless of what is determined since it is expected that this setup will run the alternator pretty hot. I will be out at the boat tonight to remove the alternator and will take notes or a picture of what is connected for more clarity in my description. Thanks for the input and help.

Eric

Stu Jackson

#11
Eric, it is truly disconcerting when these things happen.

In this topic, we discussed the issues with hot alternators:  

Small Engine Mode (read the link to the hot alternator topic, too)

http://c34.org/bbs/index.php/topic,4669.0.html

Please read or reread the link to the hot alternator topic, too, because it mimics exactly what your issue seems to be (other than a defective alternator).  Replies #4 and #20 deal with the concepts of buying a high output alternator and then deliberately reducing the output to keep the alternators from getting hot!  

FWIW, I ordered another 100A alternator from BC because I was experiencing difficulties with my 2 or 3 year old BC from Harvey.  I reported and updated the Critical Upgrades page to include the ALTERNATOR PIVOT BOLT brought to light on other forums and by Maine Sail and others.  It has already been included in the C34 Tech wiki for the alternator bracket system upgrade.  

I attribute this to a couple of things:

1.  The pivot bolt allowed the alternator to wobble.  Badly.  http://c34.org/bbs/index.php/topic,5078.msg47017.html#msg47017

2.  I had recently corrected the battery sense wire from the back of the alternator to the house bank.  The alternator, instead of just reading its own voltage, was now correctly reading the house bank voltage and outputting as it should.  But now higher than before.

3.  In addition to the pivot bolt, the lower bolt is reported to need an M8 screw rather than SAE which came with the alternator bracket kit.  I tried an M8 bolt on the bottom of the adjustment arm, but since I'd had an SAE bolt in there for so long, it didn't work.  In addition, Maine Sail has recently reported on another forum (and right here: http://c34.org/bbs/index.php/topic,5127.msg47013.html#msg47013) that he had been using longer bolts for both the top and bottom of the brackets and adding nuts at the back for both, which tends to keep much better belt tension.  When I get my new alternator, I will do so.

I ordered my new BC alternator from Harvey on May 21.  Turns out he has had a heart attack and pneumonia, but I spoke with him this morning and he is back in the shop.

Maine Sail has also reported on the Leece Neville alternators.  His writeup and links to his own pbase website for adding external regulation to a LN unit can be found here:  http://c34.org/bbs/index.php/topic,5686.msg35769.html#msg35769  The ASE model # for a 90A LN unit is 110-602 and the kit is 114-307.  I recently spoke to Bob at ASE and he confirmed those.  It's also here:  http://forums.catalina.sailboatowners.com/showthread.php?t=106489

After all this, there may be some advantages to considering another one of Maine Sail's concepts: Musings Regarding External Regulation - http://forums.catalina.sailboatowners.com/showthread.php?t=125392

My next steps:

1.  Install my new BC from Harvey
2.  Consider amp manager as well as Small Engine Mode (which just makes even less output!!!)
3.  Try a Leece Neville with the external kit
4.  Forget about external regulation altogether

Good luck, Eric, keep us posted.
Stu Jackson, C34 IA Secretary, #224 1986, "Aquavite"  Cowichan Bay, BC  Maple Bay Marina  SR/FK, M25, Rocna 10 (22#) (NZ model)

"There is no problem so great that it can't be solved."

Stu Jackson

Quote from: mainesail on July 09, 2012, 03:54:45 PM
Eric,

We really need more information on exactly how this is wired and installed. Where is the alt sense wire, battery switch, alt output wire, etc. etc...? If the batts were in-fact fully charged there should be no way you burned up the alt due to temp from load acceptance..

It is sounding a lot like an install problem? We also need specifics. Statements such as "voltage expected" tells us very little and we ideally need to know what the regulator is programmed for, all settings, where all the wires go, alt ground wire, terminals on the back of the BC alt etc. etc...

Why are you turning off the key with the engine running? Do you have a combiner, Echo charger etc.??

"Alt ground wire"  Eric, did you add a separate ground wire from the alternator to the engine main negative connection?  Where is your battery sense wire?  Back of the alternator to the regulator or to the house bank?  Basic wet cell program on the regulator?  Do you have a battery monitor?  If so, which one?
Stu Jackson, C34 IA Secretary, #224 1986, "Aquavite"  Cowichan Bay, BC  Maple Bay Marina  SR/FK, M25, Rocna 10 (22#) (NZ model)

"There is no problem so great that it can't be solved."

lazybone

Quote from: efiste on July 09, 2012, 08:23:33 AM
I recently completed an upgrade of my original 1987 Catalina Motorola 55 AMP internally regulated alternator with the C34 project Electrical Upgrade recommendation of a Blue Circle 100 AMP alternator (perfect fit rebuilt alternator) and a new Balmar 3 stage external regulator. After many checks and heavy expectation of a wiring issue, the wiring appears to be correct. I have also connected the AO directly to the battery bank with a #2 wire. I have checked the voltages of the regulator and the alternator with expected outputs. Twice now, though, the alternator has overheated (quickly way too hot to touch), started to burn, and fried the diodes (perhaps not in that order). This occurred once with partially depleted batteries (4 T105s in series-parallel) and once after fully charged. After the local alternator shop replaced the diodes the first time, I completed some more further testing after the alternator was re-installed while connected to shore power and charging the batteries at various RPMs. Everything seemed to work correctly, no burn smell, and the expected voltage output. As soon as I left the dock and kicked up some RPMs, I could smell the alternator burning and then noticed the voltage drop to battery voltage.

I believe the new external regulator is working and the alternator seemed okay at first and then fixed, checked again to be working correctly. I certainly think that if I get the alternator fixed again, the same situation will occur. The only thing that "I think" occurs differently from when it has worked until it fails is:

1) connected to shore power and charging the batteries (this may or may not have been the case during the first failure)
2) slightly longer run time at higher RPMs (after leaving the dock)

I was heading out on a one week vacation on the boat, so I ran the engine with the key off after starting the engine to cut out the alternator output. I kept my batteries charged with a Honda geni and shore power while away. While continuing to diagnosis the issue, I fairly quickly slightly smell the burning from the alternator if I leave the key on after starting the engine. As expected, there is no charging voltage coming from the alternator.

Any thoughts on what might be causing this? I am at a loss unless there is actually a failure of the alternator or regulator which I do not think is likely the issue. The marina yard mechanics are also at a loss, but their skills (or patience to resolve an issue) are sometimes questionable.



Just as a side note:  at a 3% voltage drop #2 wire @ 100 amp is only good for a very, very short distance.
Ciao tutti


S/V LAZYBONES  #677

Ron Hill

Guys : I am far from an electrical whiz.
 
BUT, It never made any sence to me to try charging the batteries from two differant sources at the same time - the engine alternator and the shore power AC charger.

It is a simple matter to shut off the AC charger or all AC before you start the engine, if your head is NOT up and locked!!
A thought
Ron, Apache #788