I was wondering what would be the best place to connect to a positive switched ignition source I’m installing an electric fan, relay ,any ideas or thoughts would be greatly appreciated thank you
Factory original charging system? Connecting to the battery certainly will overload the ammeter and related charging system wiring/connections while in operation.....That should not create unnecessary load on the electrical system, as you are only powering the relay. Power the fans directly from a battery source under the hood.
As I stated in my post, the only drain on the original wiring system is the relay. Powering the fans from the battery will not have affect the ammeter and related wiring because the draw is directly from the battery. The ammeter and associated wiring only tells the alternator when to charge the battery via the voltage regulator. If you have a heavy load on your battery, the alternator will only charge the battery more. It has nothing to do with a load on the ammeter. The only extra load on ammeter and associated wiring is the relay no matter how you power the relay, be it ignition 1, or any other switched source.Factory original charging system? Connecting to the battery certainly will overload the ammeter and related charging system wiring/connections while in operation.
You too eh? That is not correct, dead wrong. On a stock Chrysler charging system from this period, any loads placed at the battery while the engine is running, pulls it’s current from the alternator, through the ammeter and related circuit, up to the alternator’s max output while the engine is running. This current can be seen on the ammeter as it will register as false charging current on the ammeter. Again, the alternator is primary voltage potential device while the charging system is in operation, not the battery.Powering the fans from the battery will not have affect the ammeter and related wiring because the draw is directly from the battery. The ammeter and associated wiring only tells the alternator when to charge the battery via the voltage regulator. If you have a heavy load on your battery, the alternator will only charge the battery more. It has nothing to do with a load on the ammeter. The only extra load on ammeter and associated wiring is the relay no matter how you power the relay, be it ignition 1, or any other switched source.
“persisting” yea, funny thing about facts, will aways remain as facts, can't be changed.72RR,
You keep persisting with this nonsense about the charging system. Post # 7 is correct.
Look at the Chrys charging system below ~1971. The ign system is connected directly to the bat +ve terminal, as well as some other devices. Whatever device you connect to the bat direct, or to the alt stud, will show up as a voltage drop at the battery...because current is being drawn from the bat. The charging system will respond accordingly & increase the charge rate. You can add as many things as you like to the bat +ve terminal, as long as the current draw does not exceed the alts ability to charge. If you are pulling 80 amps from the bat & you have a 60 amp alt, you are going to have a flat battery.
Have I not prefaced every post/reply on this subject about the importance of load placement, that it only applies to these stock Chrysler unmodified ammeter-based charging systems from this time. This is not about idiot light-based systems, ammeter by-passed systems, voltmeter converted, or any of the other charging systems in 99.9% of the vehicles on the road toady. This is not about how the charging system responds to load caused voltage drop. It's about load placement does matter for these cars with stock charging systems. For the last time, if you place added loads at the battery, on these stock Chrysler unmodified ammeter-based charging systems from this time, the current the added load draws comes from the alternator not the battery while the engine is running, being pulled through the stock charging system components and conductors. They are not designed to handle this added current and failure of these components then becomes imminent over time. The ammeter is also then defeated in it’s designed purpose to register only battery charging/discharging current. The ammeter will register the actual charging current and your added load current together, showing as a false charging current indication. Bulkhead connectors and ammeter insulators have been burning up on these cars since they were new because of the described misplaced loading at the battery.And one more time, there is no problem connecting devices direct to the battery, as long as the total current draw does not exceed the alt rating. The middle diagram in the above post shows alt charging because it has, correctly, detected the voltage drop at the battery from the device
& is charging the battery.
Connecting additional devices at the alt stud causes the same voltage drop & the alt increases output accordingly. Might be easier to understand if there was no ammeter & just an idiot light, like many cars have.
In the diagram below of an idiot light charging system, exactly the same principle is involved. Numerous devices are connected directly to the battery because they may need to activated without the engine running/alt charging: power windows [ 40 amp cct breaker ], conv top, etc
Radio fuse? The radio is on the accessory ignition switch position. The primary side a fan control relay should be on Ignition 1, run only position. Won’t find that at the fuse box