OldBawley
Well-Known Member
Had fire at an other occasion. Had been putting new bearings in the alternator. In refitting the alternator I must have forgotten to tighten the nut holding the big output cable to the diodebrighe stud. All went well for some days, then fire. The cable was glowing and the brass stud melded! See pic. A bad connection gives sparks, and they create huge ????? heat. Could repair the stud by drilling it out of the diode heat sink, tapping the whole and putting a SS bolt in it.
The alternator is an old Lucas, Max 30 Amp.
Regulation is done by hand, a combination of switches, light bulbs and a rheostat allows me to regulate the outgoing current- tension. I have a Sterling regulator but he dos not know my intentions or the weather forecast. He has no idea how much longer I will diesel, when start sailing. So, I am a smarter regulator than he is. I know witch group of battery’s is been charged, witch wind there will be on the anchorage,
We rarely need the alternator, have solar and windgen. Dieseling without tension on the field saves a lot of power.
The alternator is an old Lucas, Max 30 Amp.
Regulation is done by hand, a combination of switches, light bulbs and a rheostat allows me to regulate the outgoing current- tension. I have a Sterling regulator but he dos not know my intentions or the weather forecast. He has no idea how much longer I will diesel, when start sailing. So, I am a smarter regulator than he is. I know witch group of battery’s is been charged, witch wind there will be on the anchorage,
We rarely need the alternator, have solar and windgen. Dieseling without tension on the field saves a lot of power.