I noticed that my alternator was doing some strange things (I have an analog voltmeter and the needle was doing a lot of dipping during load, signal and wipers especially) so I installed another (not new, but fresher) one. The voltmeter needle was steadier after that, so off I went. Soon after that (about 3 weeks), my battery died. Kaput. Damaged beyond repair. Couldn't even jump start it. At the time, I didn't know what the true culprit was: The alternator I just installed, the alternator that I removed, or the battery itself.
I bought a digital voltmeter, ammeter combo and installed it with the new battery along with upgrading the "big 3" as a precautionary measure. With the new alternator, the voltage remained steady at 14.6~14.8. However, the amps would read below 10 at first, which is normal, but after some driving, the amps would drop to as low as 1.3, but was consistently high 2s, low 3s. Even when I turned on the blower, the high, beams, etc., the amps would not jump up or down greatly, just maybe up to 9 amps, then go back down to 2~3. According to the FSM, the amps should read more in the 30 range and above. If it does not, the FSM states to replace the alternator (no internal fixes can be made, i guess). Here is a pic of the meter at the end of my drive:
Today I went to O'reillys with the old alternator and the car and asked for some tests. The old alternator was plugged into the machine and surprise, surprise, it failed all 3 tests (i saw FAIL 3 times, dunno if he retested it 3 times, or if there are 3 parts to the test). Then we went to the car and ran some diagnostics with an EXP800 on the new one. The test was normal, and he gave me a printout:
The printout seems to be based on the voltage. I asked about AMPs and he dismissed them, said they didn't matter, so I left.
Here are some questions:
Assuming that the ammeter is correctly wired, should I worry about the low amp readings?
Seeing that the EXP800 test says I'm good to go, am I truly good to go? I just don't want to do another song and dance to warranty my stupid battery.
It would appear that the old alternator started a chain reaction in the battery, so I would deduce that the problem all along was the old alternator. I just want to make sure that the new alternator will last me so I can move on reasonably worry free (because all corolla owners should never drive completely worry-free), I just can't seem to find any definitive answer about the amps. The FSM doesn't even explain why lower than 30 amps under load is a problem, nor does it explain its cause.
Thanks, your opinions are appreciated.
R