Got a question about the charging system, follow me for a few minutes if you will. I know alternator based charging systems will produce enough power to at least idle a spark ignition motor. They'll usually stall if you give it some gas or turn on the lights.
Now my understanding here is fuzzy so correct me if I'm wrong but there are two problems with this. The main problem is that the battery acts as a damper for the alternator absorbing momentary stray charges in the system and without it these currents will fry most thing electrical such as the diodes in the alternator. This is especially true if the battery is disconnected while the alternator is making power. Even a dead battery provides some damping. The other problem is the alternator's output is controlled by an electromagnet who's voltage is varied by the voltage regulator. The regulator needs power from the battery before the alternator to start the alternator. Sometimes there's enough residual magnetism in the windings to allow it to self start but without a battery it can stall under load cutting off the power.
A simple tractor with a mechanically injected diesel that only uses electrical power for starting and running the lights should be able run without a battery by disabling the alternator to prevent it from frying the system. I could do this by removing the belt but if I understand the system correctly the key also disconnects the voltage regulator which should disable the alternator. Hook jumper cables up to a suitable battery/vehicle, turn the key on, get it started, flip the key off, remove jumper cables and drive away. And finally my question, has anyone tried this? Does anyone know of any reason why it wouldn't work? Once I've got the motor back together again I'll do some probing with the multimeter but I was curious if anyone else had tried it.
I'd like to try this because this thing will see intermittent use a best (hard on batteries), batteries are expensive, I've got high capacity battery in my truck, and the lights don't work anyway.
Now my understanding here is fuzzy so correct me if I'm wrong but there are two problems with this. The main problem is that the battery acts as a damper for the alternator absorbing momentary stray charges in the system and without it these currents will fry most thing electrical such as the diodes in the alternator. This is especially true if the battery is disconnected while the alternator is making power. Even a dead battery provides some damping. The other problem is the alternator's output is controlled by an electromagnet who's voltage is varied by the voltage regulator. The regulator needs power from the battery before the alternator to start the alternator. Sometimes there's enough residual magnetism in the windings to allow it to self start but without a battery it can stall under load cutting off the power.
A simple tractor with a mechanically injected diesel that only uses electrical power for starting and running the lights should be able run without a battery by disabling the alternator to prevent it from frying the system. I could do this by removing the belt but if I understand the system correctly the key also disconnects the voltage regulator which should disable the alternator. Hook jumper cables up to a suitable battery/vehicle, turn the key on, get it started, flip the key off, remove jumper cables and drive away. And finally my question, has anyone tried this? Does anyone know of any reason why it wouldn't work? Once I've got the motor back together again I'll do some probing with the multimeter but I was curious if anyone else had tried it.
I'd like to try this because this thing will see intermittent use a best (hard on batteries), batteries are expensive, I've got high capacity battery in my truck, and the lights don't work anyway.
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