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I liken this question to exhaust tube sizing questions. Those two (orange/black) charge wires on our 2G alternators; what would be their equivalent if they were joined into one wire?
2000 Grand Marquis LS HPP, a hand-me-down in 2008 with 128,000 km; 175,000 km as of July 2014
mods: air filter box 'tuba', headlight relay harness, J-mod (around 186,350 km), 70mm throttle body, KYB Gas-A-Just shocks, aluminum driveshaft, ARA3 PCM
I guess I gotta figure that one out. I wonder if my father can determine the gauge by sight (he has very good eyes)? I was curious as to how much of an upgrade 4 gauge cable is over the 2 orange/black wires. I know that I have read on here in numerous posts that those 2 charge wires can burn after a while.
I guess I gotta figure that one out. I wonder if my father can determine the gauge by sight (he has very good eyes)? I was curious as to how much of an upgrade 4 gauge cable is over the 2 orange/black wires. I know that I have read on here in numerous posts that those 2 charge wires can burn after a while.
Packman
If you work with something enough you quickly recognize it.
What you also need to remember with the original charge wires is that there is a fusable link in each wire, wired to protect a 65amp alternator. You now have 130 amp potentially flowing, and with that you need to augment what is there.
The general rule is that two of a particular gauge become 2 wire sizes larger. Thats not exact, but close enough. A pair of 10 awg is an 8 awg by that rule. By actual wire size, its 7 awg. Basically, the rule is close enough without getting you into trouble.
For what its worth, I once tried a single chunk of 8awg from alternator to battery. It got slightly warm to the touch when charging. I think I have 6 awg in there now with a 175 amp fuse. That was the stock value on a Taurus with a 130 amp, so I figure its good enough.
Running fuses in parallel is a bad idea. Say the stock is 75 amps. Running another 75 across it does not predictably give you 150 amps of fuse capacity. Chances are about zero that they will have precisely the same characteristics. The actual current flow through any given fuse will partly depend on wire resistance as well. Basically it gets too damn complicated to figure out with enough precision for my liking. Run one wire with one fuse and you know what you have.
86 Lincoln Town Car (Galactica).
5.0 HO, CompCams XE258,Scorpion 1.72 roller rockers, 3.55 K code rear, tow package, BHPerformance ported E7 heads, Tmoss Explorer intake, 65mm throttle body, Hedman 1 5/8" headers, 2.5" dual exhaust, ASP underdrive pulley
91 Lincoln Mark VII LSC grandpa spec white and cranberry
1984 Lincoln Continental TurboDiesel - rolls coal
Originally posted by phayzer5
I drive a Lincoln. I can't be bothered to shift like the peasants and rabble rousers
Everything looks like voodoo if you don't understand how it works
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