2014 Chaparral with 380-C-D V8.
2 batteries, less than 2 years old.
Last season, I noticed my voltage would sometimes ride in the high 12v range. Never had a dead battery, always cranked strong.
I know the alternator from this era is supposed to be a “smart“ one, where charging output is regulated to what the battery array needs, not just fixed output like older design, so I assumed my batteries just were nice and strong.
Yesterday on my ride back to the marina, charging voltage was hanging out at 12.5v for quite a while. That was a red flag. Every once in a while it would pop up to 13.3v for a few seconds and then drop down to 12.5v again.
Once back at the marina, I decided to turn the cut-off switch to the other battery and restart the engine to watch voltage. 13.5v, holding steady. Hmm. Turn off engine, switch back to the other battery, restart engine, now 13.5v and holding steady, unlike before.
So is this an alternator or a switch issue? Switch is only a couple years old, alternator is original. 490hrs.
Thanks.
2 batteries, less than 2 years old.
Last season, I noticed my voltage would sometimes ride in the high 12v range. Never had a dead battery, always cranked strong.
I know the alternator from this era is supposed to be a “smart“ one, where charging output is regulated to what the battery array needs, not just fixed output like older design, so I assumed my batteries just were nice and strong.
Yesterday on my ride back to the marina, charging voltage was hanging out at 12.5v for quite a while. That was a red flag. Every once in a while it would pop up to 13.3v for a few seconds and then drop down to 12.5v again.
Once back at the marina, I decided to turn the cut-off switch to the other battery and restart the engine to watch voltage. 13.5v, holding steady. Hmm. Turn off engine, switch back to the other battery, restart engine, now 13.5v and holding steady, unlike before.
So is this an alternator or a switch issue? Switch is only a couple years old, alternator is original. 490hrs.
Thanks.