C.E. Niehoff & Co. N1601, N1602, N1603, N1604 Troubleshooting Guides

C.E. Niehoff & Co.
N1601, N1602, N1603, and N1604
Alternator Troubleshooting Guide
Hazard Definitions
These terms are used to bring attention to presence of hazard(s) of various risk levels or to important information concerning product life. Indicates presence of hazard(s) that
CAUTION
will or can cause minor personal injury or property damage.
Indicates special instructions on
NOTICE
installation, operation or mainte­ nance that are important but not related to personal injury hazards.
Table of Contents
Section A: Wiring Diagrams ............................... 2 – 3
Section B: Basic Troubleshooting ............................4
Section C: Advanced Troubleshooting .............. 5 – 10
Battery Conditions
Until temperatures of electrical
NOTICE
system components stabilize, these conditions may be observed during cold-start voltage tests.
Maintenance/Low Maintenance Battery
— Immediately after engine starts, system volts are lower than regulator setpoint, amps are medium. — 3–5 minutes into charge cycle, system volts increase, amps decrease. — 5–10 minutes into charge cycle, system volts increase to, or near, regulator setpoint and amps decrease to a minimum. — Low maintenance battery has same characteristics with slightly longer recharge times.
Maintenance-free Battery
— Immediately after engine starts, system volts are lower than regulator setpoint, low charging amps. — Once charge cycle begins, low volts and low amps are still present. — After alternator energizes, voltage will increase several tenths. Amps will increase gradually, then quickly, to medium to high amps. — F i n a l l y , v o l t s w i l l i n c r e a s e t o s e t p o i n t a n d a m p s w i l l decrease. The time it takes to reach optimum voltage and amper­age will vary with engine speed, load, and ambient temperature.
High-cycle Maintenance-free Battery
These batteries respond better than standard mainte­nance-free. Charge acceptance of these batteries may display characteristics similar to maintenance batteries.
AGM (Absorbed Glass Mat) Maintenance-free Batter y
These dry-cell batteries respond better than standard maintenance-free. If battery state of charge drops to 75% or less, batteries should be recharged to 95% or higher separately from the engine’s charging system to avoid damaging charging system components and to provide best overall performance. Charge acceptance of these batteries may display maintenance batteries.
characteristics similar to
Battery Charge Volt and Amp Values
Volt and amp levels fluctuate depending on the battery state of charge. If batteries are in a state of discharge—as after extended cranking time to start the engine—system volts will measure lower than the regulator setpoint after the engine is restarted and system amps will measure higher. This is a normal condition for the charging system; the greater the battery discharge level, the lower the system volts and the higher the system amps. The volt and amp readings will change as batteries recover and become fully charged: system volts will increase to regulator setpoint and system amps will decrease to low level (depending on other loads).
Low Amps: Minimum or lowest charging system amp
value required to maintain battery state of charge, obtained when testing the charging system with a fully charged battery and no other loads applied. This value will vary with battery type.
Medium Amps: System amps value which can cause
the battery temperature to rise above adequate charg­ing temperature within 4-8 hours of charge time. To prevent battery damage, the charge amps should be reduced when battery temperature rises. Check battery manufacturer’s recommendations for proper charge amp rates.
High Amps: System amps value which can cause
the battery temperature to rise above adequate charg­ing temperature within 2-3 hours of charge time. To prevent battery damage, the charge amps should be reduced when battery temperature rises. Check battery manufacturer’s recommendations for proper charge amp rates.
Battery Voltage: Steady-state voltage value as mea-
sured with battery in open circuit with no battery load. This value relates to battery state of charge.
Charge Voltage: Voltage value obtained when the
charging system is operating. This value will be higher than battery voltage and must never exceed the regula­tor voltage setpoint.
B+ Voltage: Voltage value obtained when measuring
voltage at battery positive terminal or alternator B+ terminal.
Surface Charge: Higher than normal battery voltage
occurring when the battery is disconnected from battery charger. The surface charge must be removed to determine true battery voltage and state of charge.
Significant Magnetism: Change in strength or intensi-
ty of a magnetic field present in alternator rotor shaft when the field coil is energized. The magnetic field strength when the field coil is energized should feel stronger than when the field is not energized.
Voltage Droop or Sag: Normal condition occurring
when the load demand on alternator is greater than rated alternator output at given rotor shaft RPM.
TG29D
Page 1
Section A: Wiring Diagrams
CEN N1601, N1602, N1603, N1604 Alternator and Regulator Description and Operation
The alternators listed below are self-rectifying. All wind­ings and current-transmitting components are non­moving, so there are no brushes or slip rings to wear out. Energize switch activates regulator. Field coil is then energized.
• N1601 28 V 400 A
N1602 28 V 400 A with optional 28 V/ 14 V (50 A maximum on 14 V)
• N1603 28 V 450 A
N1604 28 V 400 A
N3107 regulator used on some N1601, N1603, and N1604 alternators maintains alternator output voltage at regulated setting as vehicle electrical loads are switched on and off. Alternator output current is self­limiting and will not exceed rated capacity of alternator. The regulator has:
• an AC terminal to provide optional AC voltage output tap.
• overvoltage cutout (OVCO). Regulators with OVCO (overvoltage cutout) will trip at vehicle electrical system voltages above 32 volts that exist longer than 3 seconds. OVCO feature detects high voltage and reacts by signaling relay in field control circuit to open. This turns off alternator. Restarting engine resets OVCO circuit.
The following regulators receive energize signal after engine is running:
• N3118—used on some N1602 alternators
N3211—used on some N1601 and N1603 alternators
N3223—used on some N1602 alternators
N3236—used on some N1604 alternators
N3237—used on some N1602 and N1603 alternators
N3245—used on some N1602 and N1603 alternators
Regulator monitors alternator rotation and provides field current only when it detects alternator shaft rotat­ing at suitable speed. After regulator detects alternator rotation, it gradually applies field current, preventing an abrupt mechanical load on accessory drive system. The soft start may take up to 10 seconds at full electrical load. These regulators:
• are negative temperature compensated. Setpoints are 28.0 ± 0.2 V (and on N3118 and N3223, 14.0 ±
0.2 V. See below.) at 75F. N3237 and N3245 regula­tors are negative temperature compensated accord­ing to switch-selected battery type. Customer selects position per application.
• provide overvoltage cutout (OVCO). Regulator will trip OVCO when system voltage rises above 32 V in a 28 V system (16 V in a 14 V system) for longer than 3 seconds. OVCO feature detects high voltage and signals the field circuit to open, turning off alterna­tor. Restarting engine resets OVCO circuit.
• maintain alternator output voltage at regulated settings as vehicle electrical loads are switched on and off.
N3118 and N3223 regulators can be used in single 28 V or dual voltage applications. The regulators:
• allow single-voltage operation (28 V only). 14 V single voltage application is not available with these regulators.
• provide optional 28 V/14 V output only from the regulator when phase cable from alternator is connected to regulator.
Page 2
TG29D
B+ connections on alternator
Both positive terminals must be connected together at battery positive potential, using interconnect cable and cable of suitable size as part of vehicle cabling, when alternator is installed in vehicle and during operation.
Interconnect
Positive cables from vehicle
cable
IGN terminal
14V B+ terminal (N3118 and N3223 only)
AC terminal
Section A: Wiring Diagrams (CONT’ D)
Case ground: N1601, N1603 Isolated ground: N1604
Figure 3 — N1601-1 thru -4, N1603-1/-2, and N1604-1/-2
Wiring Diagram
B– connections on alternator
Both B – terminals must be connected to the vehicle’s common ground, using interconnect cable and cable of suitable size as part of vehicle cabling, when alternator is installed in vehicle and during operation.
Figure 1 — N1601, N1602, and N1603
Alternator and Regulator Terminals
B+ connections on alternator
Both positive terminals must be connected together at battery positive potential, using interconnect cable and cable of suitable size as part of vehicle cabling, when alternator is installed in vehicle and during operation.
Positive cables from vehicle
Interconnect cable
IGN terminal
AC terminal
•••
N3223 only — J1939 connector
Figure 4 — N1602-1, -2, -4, -5, - 6 Wiring Diagram
B– connections on alternator
Both B – terminals must be connected to the vehicle’s common ground, using interconnect cable and cable of suitable size as part of vehicle cabling, when alternator is installed in vehicle and during operation.
Figure 2 — N1604
Alternator and Regulator Terminals
TG29D
Figure 5 — N1602-3/-7 and N1603-3 Wiring Diagram
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