C.E. Niehoff & Co. C726 Troubleshooting Guides User Manual

Page 4

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Page 4

TG69A

Section C: Advanced Troubleshooting

Figure 3 – Alternator-to-Regulator Harness Plug

Chart 1 –

No Alternator Output –

Quick Diagnostic

With engine running: Does battery voltage exist at alternator B+ terminal and regulator IGN terminal?

Yes

No

Repair vehicle harness circuit to IGN terminal on regula-
tor or B+ terminal on alternator.

With key off, engine off: Unplug alternator-to-regulator harness. Connect DMM on DC volt scale across pins C
and D. Does battery voltage exist?

Yes

No

With DMM on resistance scale, does the field resistance between pins F and A in harness plug measure about
3.2 (±0.2) ohms?

Yes

No

Alternator is defective.

Alternator is defective.

With key off, engine off: Does battery voltage exist at alternator B+ terminal?

Yes

No

Repair vehicle harness circuit to B+ terminal on alternator.

Set DMM to diode test. Check continuity of rear stator diodes: Connect red lead to pin B in harness plug.
Connect black lead to alternator B+ terminal. Meter should read one diode drop (approx. 0.3 to 0.6 V).
Disconnect leads. Connect red lead to alternator B– terminal. Connect black lead to pin B.
Meter should read one diode drop (approx. 0.3 to 0.6 V).

Yes

No

Alternator is defective.

Set DMM to diode test. Check continuity of front stator diodes: Connect red lead to pin H in harness plug.
Connect black lead to alternator B+ terminal. Meter should read one diode drop (approx. 0.3 to 0.6 V).
Disconnect leads. Connect red lead to alternator B– terminal. Connect black lead to pin H. Meter should read
one diode drop (approx. 0.3 to 0.6 V).

Yes

No

Alternator is defective.

Go to Page 5 to continue.

A

B

C

D

E

F

G

H

CONNECTIONS

A

F–

B

AC

1

C

B–

D

B+/Kelvin

E Temp

F

F+/D+

G Kelvin+

H AC

2

When conducting this step, ensure that the probes do not touch other pins, as an arc may damage the
wiring in the harness.

CAUTION

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