Help me figure out why my car has fluctuating Volts
Higher RPM = alternator turning faster = higher voltage. Lower RPM = alternator turning slower = lower voltage. If you're idling and rev higher and hold it does the voltage go up and drop again when you let off the accelerator?
Given your symptoms, it may possibly be just the voltage regulator. Those can be replaced as an individual component, but if it's the problem I'd just go ahead and replace the whole alternator as a unit.
I am not an expert at this, but that's what I think.
Given your symptoms, it may possibly be just the voltage regulator. Those can be replaced as an individual component, but if it's the problem I'd just go ahead and replace the whole alternator as a unit.
I am not an expert at this, but that's what I think.
MAF is a part of the fuel system, not the electrical system. A MAF issue won't affect voltage.
You're right about the alternator charging the battery. That's why a running car typically runs at about 14v, if the alternator is performing properly it needs that voltage to charge the battery. A measurement of 12v while running is low. That should be battery voltage when off.
You're right about the alternator charging the battery. That's why a running car typically runs at about 14v, if the alternator is performing properly it needs that voltage to charge the battery. A measurement of 12v while running is low. That should be battery voltage when off.
Unless i read wrong and the issue is actually the voltage not the car idling and almost stalling when coming to a stop?
Yup i get that, but my thoughts were more along the lines of why is the conclusion that his idling issues are voltage caused. With the car running off the battery the exact voltage the alternator is putting out wont matter as far as the engine is concerned. As long as the battery is charged its going to put out a mostly steady 12v.
Unless i read wrong and the issue is actually the voltage not the car idling and almost stalling when coming to a stop?
Unless i read wrong and the issue is actually the voltage not the car idling and almost stalling when coming to a stop?
So if the engine rpms drop from almost stalling the alternator has also lost rpms and wont be providing the same voltage to the system and battery while the battery is under the same current draw. That situation will always result in lower voltage readings.
Im just wondering why when the first time you came to a stop and experienced the car almost stalling you went down the road of it being a voltage issue? Usually when a car wants to stall its because its not getting enough air or fuel or theres something wrong with the ignition system like a weak coil pack or fouling spark plugs.
Im just wondering why when the first time you came to a stop and experienced the car almost stalling you went down the road of it being a voltage issue? Usually when a car wants to stall its because its not getting enough air or fuel or theres something wrong with the ignition system like a weak coil pack or fouling spark plugs.
So if the engine rpms drop from almost stalling the alternator has also lost rpms and wont be providing the same voltage to the system and battery while the battery is under the same current draw. That situation will always result in lower voltage readings.
Im just wondering why when the first time you came to a stop and experienced the car almost stalling you went down the road of it being a voltage issue? Usually when a car wants to stall its because its not getting enough air or fuel or theres something wrong with the ignition system like a weak coil pack or fouling spark plugs.
Im just wondering why when the first time you came to a stop and experienced the car almost stalling you went down the road of it being a voltage issue? Usually when a car wants to stall its because its not getting enough air or fuel or theres something wrong with the ignition system like a weak coil pack or fouling spark plugs.
I mean even when the car is not attempting to stall, the volts are low, driving on the highway etc. The volts are constantly low.
At 57k a spark plug or coil pack shouldn't be the issue right? I mean nothing is guaranteed, but...
I could check A/F and see if my maf is an issue? Couldn't low volts with a maf and it's readings?
Anyway emailed my advisor and trying to get the car in Friday.
If a low voltage situation at stop was causing stall conditions and you're also getting low voltage all the time as you just indicated then you'd be in a constant state of almost stalling.
Have you checked your odb codes? You may not have a cel, but most cars will pop pending codes before an actual code is thrown. Im not sure alt/batt or not how a stall condition hasn't cuased some sort of code either. You could also check to see if maybe the A/C clutch or something else in the belt system is hanging up. If somethings too tight or binding enough it could drag and maybe cause this issue. Something like that wouldn't trigger an odb code. I still think though theres something up with the air or fuel like a bad throttle body or something.
My wife had a 9-5 saab that had a bad throttle body that did exactly this. It didnt stall everytime, but when it did it was always slowing down and stopping. We got rid of the car before i could resolve the problem.
Have you checked your odb codes? You may not have a cel, but most cars will pop pending codes before an actual code is thrown. Im not sure alt/batt or not how a stall condition hasn't cuased some sort of code either. You could also check to see if maybe the A/C clutch or something else in the belt system is hanging up. If somethings too tight or binding enough it could drag and maybe cause this issue. Something like that wouldn't trigger an odb code. I still think though theres something up with the air or fuel like a bad throttle body or something.
My wife had a 9-5 saab that had a bad throttle body that did exactly this. It didnt stall everytime, but when it did it was always slowing down and stopping. We got rid of the car before i could resolve the problem.
If a low voltage situation at stop was causing stall conditions and you're also getting low voltage all the time as you just indicated then you'd be in a constant state of almost stalling.
Have you checked your odb codes? You may not have a cel, but most cars will pop pending codes before an actual code is thrown. Im not sure alt/batt or not how a stall condition hasn't cuased some sort of code either. You could also check to see if maybe the A/C clutch or something else in the belt system is hanging up. If somethings too tight or binding enough it could drag and maybe cause this issue. Something like that wouldn't trigger an odb code. I still think though theres something up with the air or fuel like a bad throttle body or something.
My wife had a 9-5 saab that had a bad throttle body that did exactly this. It didnt stall everytime, but when it did it was always slowing down and stopping. We got rid of the car before i could resolve the problem.
Have you checked your odb codes? You may not have a cel, but most cars will pop pending codes before an actual code is thrown. Im not sure alt/batt or not how a stall condition hasn't cuased some sort of code either. You could also check to see if maybe the A/C clutch or something else in the belt system is hanging up. If somethings too tight or binding enough it could drag and maybe cause this issue. Something like that wouldn't trigger an odb code. I still think though theres something up with the air or fuel like a bad throttle body or something.
My wife had a 9-5 saab that had a bad throttle body that did exactly this. It didnt stall everytime, but when it did it was always slowing down and stopping. We got rid of the car before i could resolve the problem.
Regardless there is a problem, any advise of the dealer says there isn't a problem?
I would expect them to say theres nothing wrong since there arent any codes. If you can do a test drive with a tech and replicate the stalling then they should attempt diagnosis beyond pulling it in and checking the codes. My main advice is to not mention anything about the voltage and just explain and demonstrate the stalling. If you tell them it's voltage related then they wil only check the electric system and see everything is within spec and send you on your way.
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