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Other that the stud connections to the internal shunt bus bar, there is no other potential source of heat within the factory ammeter. With tight connections and good insulators there will be no external or “internal” failures while operating in the current range as designed, the notion that ammeters will spontaneously fail internally has no basis in fact. Heat is generated when connections fail period, when resistance builds and/or a failed/crushed insulator allows stud contact between the stud and cluster frame.
No argument here that the Chrysler designed charging circuits have weaknesses, they were never designed to last more than a few years, after the warranty period lapses and it’s time for trade-in. All automobile manufactures have used ammeters since the inception of automobiles. Fact is they provide a more complete and accurate information, in real time, about the current state of the battery charge-discharge and operational health of the charging system, much more info than a volt meter or a no-charge idiot light.
Automotive manufactures moved away due to cost not because of some inherited safety concerns with the use of an ammeter. That said, Chrysler/Dodge waited way too long into the age of plastic dash construction in the case of late seventies trucks.
My preference/opinion? Rebuild the original harnesses, replacing original 12-gauge charge circuit wires with 8 gauges or larger, by-pass the bulkhead connectors, run straight through to the ammeter. Protect the wires passing through the firewall with appropriate sized grommet. Use an appropriately sized fusible link based on vehicle loads at the battery or starter relay. Tight connections, not too tight that the fiber insulators are crushed. All vehicle loads on the alternator side on the ammeter, no additional loads of any kind on the battery side.
Strange, as I read these posts, the condescending tone I pick-up is not in any of Nacho’s posts.
No argument here that the Chrysler designed charging circuits have weaknesses, they were never designed to last more than a few years, after the warranty period lapses and it’s time for trade-in. All automobile manufactures have used ammeters since the inception of automobiles. Fact is they provide a more complete and accurate information, in real time, about the current state of the battery charge-discharge and operational health of the charging system, much more info than a volt meter or a no-charge idiot light.
Automotive manufactures moved away due to cost not because of some inherited safety concerns with the use of an ammeter. That said, Chrysler/Dodge waited way too long into the age of plastic dash construction in the case of late seventies trucks.
My preference/opinion? Rebuild the original harnesses, replacing original 12-gauge charge circuit wires with 8 gauges or larger, by-pass the bulkhead connectors, run straight through to the ammeter. Protect the wires passing through the firewall with appropriate sized grommet. Use an appropriately sized fusible link based on vehicle loads at the battery or starter relay. Tight connections, not too tight that the fiber insulators are crushed. All vehicle loads on the alternator side on the ammeter, no additional loads of any kind on the battery side.
Strange, as I read these posts, the condescending tone I pick-up is not in any of Nacho’s posts.
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