Ammeter bypass

Mopar man,,,,, hello and thank you
I did this for the reason the guys previous car burnt down from the ammeter so he wanted to fix this car before it burnt too.

Year of vehicle I'm not exact but it's ok it's not my vehicle and most info said it's for 60s 70s I thought

You are saying the Ammeter bypass is different on this type of vehicle? I'm confused it's the same setup I thought as others....

Big John are you referring to me?
Don't get a job as a spamer finder
Did not post a link or ask for your bank account #
Nothing about that post even comes off as spam but thanks for the warm welcome
If you aren't a spammer, I apologize.

But who doesn't know what year car they are working on?
 
Why is someone on a help forum just to ask stupid questions and instigate and actually spam posts themselves?
But thanks for all the helpful info John lmao
 
All the reading I did said that simple alt to starter solenoid bypass was harmless,now you say it's actually bad? I'm so confused right now.

When you add a direct connection from the alternator to the starter, you give a second path for current to flow between the battery and the alternator. The first path is from the battery to the ammeter to the alternator. This first path has a fusable link in the path. It will burn up if there is too much current in the path. The fusable link is a short piece of wire in the engine compartment near the bulkhead connector.

When you add a second path directly between the battery and the alternator, you reduce some of the current flowing in the first path, and if there is a fault somewhere in the first path it is less likely to blow the fusable link. Also, if you do not install a fuse or similar fuse link in the second path, then you can have a fire on that line if the alternator fails (ie diodes go bad).
 
Correct,I did it how everyone said.but didn't you say doing this causes more problems in a previous post?

Current car is 1960 new yorker
Car that burnt down was a 61 ny
 
Why is someone on a help forum just to ask stupid questions and instigate and actually spam posts themselves?
But thanks for all the helpful info John lmao
OK, good point. Now you are starting to give more info that sounds like you are actually working on a car, so again, I'll apologize.

To answer your question, if you are working on a 60/61 Chrysler, almost all of this thread doesn't apply to you. Those cars use generators and not alternators. Wired different etc. I think you are getting some sort of back feed into the electrical system.

Chances are your friend's car burnt because of bad or loose wiring at the dash. The ammeters in the earlier cars are pretty robust.
 
1960 was the model year Chrysler changed away from generators to this alternator/ammeter across all platforms. Other than ’70 and up changes noted, the core charging/load distribution changed little since 1960 for this discussion. Some early models didn’t use Packard connectors at firewall passthrough, had a screw terminal bus connection. Agree, poorly maintained or abused connections likely the cause. As for the stuck full scale ammeter, disconnect the battery, if the ammeter does not center, it’s a mechanical issue within the ammeter, could be the result of heat damage at the ammeter terminals resulting from years of high resistance or loose terminals.
 
Sorry I did forget a major part of the info,on the car I worked on,the previous owner removed the generator and installed an alternator.

This car has the same setup as all the rest I thought.every picture I seen and info I read seemed like it was the same...
 
So should he take his dash apart and actually inspect the back of the gauge? Should I remove the jumper wire from alt to starter relay?
Thanks for all the help.
 
1960 was the model year Chrysler changed away from generators to this alternator/ammeter across all platforms.
They introduced them in 1960, but not across all platforms. The Chryslers still used a generator, although I have found some references to alternators being installed in some, possibly dealer installs. The 300 club has some discussion about it and the conclusion was that the 4 speed 300F had an alternator, but the automatics didn't. They also figured some, not all Imperials did too. Check the '60 FSM and they don't show an alternator.

I'm not sure about 1961 though.
 
Sorry I did forget a major part of the info,on the car I worked on,the previous owner removed the generator and installed an alternator.

This car has the same setup as all the rest I thought.every picture I seen and info I read seemed like it was the same...
Was the regulator changed too?
 
It appears they used a one wire alt and bypassed all that.they tied two factory wires together,separately from alt,and then the one main line off alt is it
 
It appears they used a one wire alt and bypassed all that.they tied two factory wires together,separately from alt,and then the one main line off alt is it
I'd say the first thing to make sure it is wired properly. Hard to tell without seeing it in person, but that doesn't sound right.
 
To follow up on this subject a bit, as a result of a more recent promotion of this by-pass as making the original system “safe”, without any mention of the added risk by a self-proclaimed Mopar expert YouTuber. I have posted some demonstration videos about this “shunt wire” by-pass and some other related Chrysler electrical issues. Includes my experience with and a demonstration of the above-mentioned C-body charge path recall some here with a pre-externally shunted ammeter may be interested in.

Thanks for posting. Years ago a vendor at Carlisle had a NOS Mopar C body bypass kit, I should have bought it (cheap money) for the part number alone.
 
On this vehicle I did not see a bulkhead block on the firewall,I did however see a similar looking plug under the dash inside and it looked fine.
This guy did not want to take his dash apart therefore the time I spent researching sounded like doing the under the hood bypass would hurt nothing and take stress off the ammeter.

Moparman thank you for the replies.
I am trying to find out year of the current now and I will ask year of the car that burnt.he said it was a new yorker also I know that.

What he said happened was ,he was driving and the ammeter jumped from full then down then full and stuck "while driving" and once it stuck full he said smoke came from the dash and started on fire he said the fire department showed up and filled the car with foam and further ruined the car.

All the reading I did said that simple alt to starter solenoid bypass was harmless,now you say it's actually bad? I'm so confused right now.
Over the shorter-trerm I've been in this forum, there have been many things I never knew about or had heard of mentioned in here. The ammeter bypass is one of them. Never had heard of such instrument panel fires on C-body Chrysler products before. I had heard of the alleged ballast resistor issues, but never had experienced that since we got our '66 Newport in the fall of 1967, or my '70 Monaco, my '67 Newport in 1981, yet some gave me the impression it was a very common situation for a ballas resistor to fail and the car not start.

NOW, something DID change with the 1972 model year. When we got our new '72 Newport Royal, I noticed the ALT needle did not move as much when the engine was revved up, like the '66 did. When I asked the service manager about this, he said that was now normal as they'd change the circuit so that all of the current did not go through the gauge, as in the past. A "shunt"-type circuit, he mentioned. That circuit change might have happened the next model year after the referenced TSB mentioned in the video?

To me, the issue of the '60s-era instrument cluster gauge can be more-related to how the circuitry was on the pre-'65 cars. Whether or not they had a real bulkhead connector or just straight circuits where complete wires went through the firewall rather than through a consolidated bulkhead connector.

Personally, I have not yet compared the factory electrical schematic of 1966, to 1970, to 1972, to look for differences. The compare that to the "recommended" ammeter by-pass.

In some related investigations, it appears that all current going through the instrument panel gauge was thr normal way to do things, until it wasn't. And GM went to the "Volts" gauge rather than "Ammeter" in the early 1970s. It was claimed that "Volts" gave a better indication of the charging system, yet I wanted to see IF the alternator/generator was actually charging and the voltage regulator was responding to loads. Which a volt gauge would not indicate. FWIW

In some earlier threads on the ammeter bypass in here, the issue of instrument panel "fires" was more known about by people who had been at dealerships which repaired law enforcement vehicles. With their non-factory electrical equipment added onto the cars and their higher-than-normal alternators to support the additional electrical loads. In a time well before "thump-thump" sound systems and such, and the electrical demands they put on the vehicle hanesses and charging systems.

Now that you've watched the videos, read the prior threads about why this alteration is felt to be needed by some.

Enjoy and welcome!
CBODY67
 
Thanks for posting. Years ago a vendor at Carlisle had a NOS Mopar C body bypass kit, I should have bought it (cheap money) for the part number alone.
That’s interesting, haven’t seen one of those in many years. Interesting too, don’t recall it being available as an over-the-counter service part, available to the general public back then. Recall part numbers typically could only be billed back through factory warranty channels or issued to dealers without billing.
 
They introduced them in 1960, but not across all platforms. The Chryslers still used a generator, although I have found some references to alternators being installed in some, possibly dealer installs. The 300 club has some discussion about it and the conclusion was that the 4 speed 300F had an alternator, but the automatics didn't. They also figured some, not all Imperials did too. Check the '60 FSM and they don't show an alternator.

I'm not sure about 1961 though.
Stand corrected on that, I recall now, Valiant /6 only in ’60 for the alternator, across the board in ’61 pretty much according the FSMs. Had checked Rock Auto for the application before posting, says alternators on everything in ’60 and generators in ’59.
 
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I would not use Rock Auto as an authority on this.
Authority? no, I don’t, just a quick reference once in a while on parts applications/interchangeability. For that, haven’t run into many errors. Not real surprised they got this one wrong, going back to 1960. Simply shows no reference to generators, only alternator in 1960 and no reference to alternators in 1959, generator brushes only.
 
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