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| | Forums66 Topics126,777 Posts1,039,272 Members48,100 | Most Online2,175 Jul 21st, 2025 | | | Joined: Sep 2006 Posts: 49 Shop Shark | Shop Shark Joined: Sep 2006 Posts: 49 | Nov. 2006 put new battery in my 64 'Burb. Has a 350.I only drive the truck once a week. Feb. 2007, try to start truck. Click, click, click. Jump battery, truck starts. Have new starter and alternator put in, but no new voltage regulator. 2 weeks go by and volt guage is pegged to right. Get new regulator put on. 2 weeks go by, try to start truck and click, click, click. Jump battery, truck starts. Take back to shop and they say there is no short. They think bad battery. In goes new battery. Once a week truck starts, no problem. This weekend (Sat.), start truck to drive 35 miles. Volt guage pegged to right for 30 miles, then moves a little to the discharge side. On the way back, guage still shows charging. But, only about 3/4 to the charge side. Sunday am, click, click, click. No battery. I have not tried to jump truck yet, because the garage is so tight with the burb in it that I have to push it out of garage in order to access the battery. HELP! | | | | Joined: Feb 2002 Posts: 12,029 Cruising in the Passing Lane | Cruising in the Passing Lane Joined: Feb 2002 Posts: 12,029 | "think" bad battery?? don't they have the ability to check it? how's the wiring? got a broken/bare wire someplace that's intermittantly shorting to ground?
Bill | | | | Joined: Jul 2004 Posts: 5,708 'Bolter | 'Bolter Joined: Jul 2004 Posts: 5,708 | '64 buffalo,
You mention 'voltmeter' several times in your post..do you actually mean ammeter. A voltmeter should hang around 14 volts and not move or jump much. The ammeter will jump around with any schizo activity in the system. The chances of getting two bad batteries is not good!
Chevrolet's are famous for 'clicky' solenoids, so this isn't too strange. A reluctant solenoid won't discharge a battery or cause a drain on the system.
It isn't unheard of for the extra kick of a jumper battery to cause a problematic solenoid to start the rig. It sounds like you have two separate problems.
Does your '64 burb really have a externally regulated alternator? If you replace the starter solenoid, you could focus on what is making the charging system malfunction. The regulator should never allow system voltage to climb above 14.8 TOPS. If the meter in the cab is truly a voltmeter and it is swinging around, the alternator is funky, or the voltage regulator is funky, or the wiring associated with these two devices is loose or broken.
A ammeter that hops around is a lot different than a voltmeter that has the jitters. Do some more digging and keep us posted.
Stuart | | | | Joined: Sep 2006 Posts: 49 Shop Shark | Shop Shark Joined: Sep 2006 Posts: 49 | Stuart,
Thanks for the input. I guess it's obvious that I'm not a mechanic. The guage I was referring to is the ammeter, the guage inside the truck. On Sat., as I mentioned, for the first 30 miles, the needle was pegged completely to the right. Then for 3-5 miles, the needle was just to the left of the last mark on the rightside of the guage. The needle was not bouncing around. When I first left the house, I noticed the needle ( when I was pushing on the accelerator) was pegged to the right. But, when the truck was idling, at a stop sign, the needle was in the center of the guage. Push down on the accelerator and the needle goes all the way to the right. The voltage regulator is external and new. The starter, solenoid and alternator are also new. Less than 500 miles on them. Also, the starter, solenoid, alternator and battery went into the truck w/o replacing the voltage regulator. Then I noticed the ammeter needle was pegged to the right. The mechanic put a voltmeter on the battery and it showed 18 volts. So, the external voltage regulator was replaced. Truck was OK for awhile. Then one morning, click, click, click. Back to the shop. They put in the second new battery, and I had no problems for about 3-4 months. Then this weekend. | | | | Joined: Jul 2004 Posts: 5,708 'Bolter | 'Bolter Joined: Jul 2004 Posts: 5,708 | '64 buffalo,
This is a weird one. Your rig has a alternator, not a generator...right. If it has a alternator, the DA plug with the two wires on the little connector are sticking out of the back of the case..pointing toward the firewall, correct.
This problem sounds like a bad voltage regulator, but the ammeter activity makes it appear you have a generator instead of a alternator.
It's possible for the battery to discharge through the alternator, and through a generator too. There is a cutout relay in the voltage regulator that suppose to open when the rig is shutdown to prevent this.
The ammeter pegged to full charge for 30 miles must have been a sight to see. Activity like this could conceivably blow a battery up. Be sure to check the battery water as it might be all boiled away. Keep searching.
Stuart | | | | Joined: Oct 2002 Posts: 4,066 Bolter | Bolter Joined: Oct 2002 Posts: 4,066 | sounds like you have a drain for sure.. you might dis connected the battery or take the battery out after your drive, at least for a couple of times,,(after it is charged up) this may save your battery till you can find the problem .. you can ruin a battery if you have a drain.... how well I know that, I went thru 2 on my 52 before I realized the drain, never could find it so I installed a dis-connect switch. Redryder pixMy HotrodA veteran - whether active duty, retired, national guard, or reserve - is someone who, at one point in his or her life, wrote a blank check made payable to The 'United States of America', for an amount of "up to and including my life."I am fighting cancer and I am winning the fight | Pain is part of life; misery is an option. | | | | Joined: Mar 2007 Posts: 81 'Bolter | 'Bolter Joined: Mar 2007 Posts: 81 | Buy a light probe, disconnect the negetive battery cable from the terminal and install the probe between the battery post and the battery ground cable. I can't remember which direction though. If you have a drain on the battery it should light up. Start pulling fuses until the light goes out. This should get you in the general area of the problem. If after pulling all the fuses and the light is still on start disconnecting, i.e alternator, regulator, etc.etc. until you get the light to go out. When you get the light to go out your found the drain.
52 Chevy 3100 5 Window, LS Swap, 4spd Auto, Vintage Air AC / Heat, CPP Power Front Disc Brake Conversion with bearing upgrade, Power Steering Conversion, LED Tail Lights
| | | | Joined: Jun 2005 Posts: 1,756 Shop Shark | Shop Shark Joined: Jun 2005 Posts: 1,756 | Doesn't make any difference what way you connect it. result will be the samee | | | | Joined: Jul 2004 Posts: 12 Junior Member | Junior Member Joined: Jul 2004 Posts: 12 | I forgot how much I love to watch ammeters!
Thanks everybody
Marc Lund Blue 49 4400 Loadmaster Black 53 3800 "Johnny C" Green 55 3805 Napco no.web.page
| | | | Joined: Feb 2002 Posts: 61 Member | Member Joined: Feb 2002 Posts: 61 | Originally posted by Rcimp: Buy a light probe, disconnect the negetive battery cable from the terminal and install the probe between the battery post and the battery ground cable. I can't remember which direction though. If you have a drain on the battery it should light up. Start pulling fuses until the light goes out. This should get you in the general area of the problem. If after pulling all the fuses and the light is still on start disconnecting, i.e alternator, regulator, etc.etc. until you get the light to go out. When you get the light to go out your found the drain. Nice trick....I should use this trick to see what's killing a batt. in a semi I have....
1948 Dodge 2 ton 1950 GMC 1 1/2 ton 1952 GMC 3/4 ton
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