The red wire (A) coming from the discharge side of the ammeter goes through the wiring harness and hooks up to the hot side of the starter solenoid. The yellow wire (B) coming from the charge side of the ammeter goes through the wiring harness and ties into the 10 AWG cable which goes between the hot side of the starter solenoid and the alternator. The points at which the two wires connect to the solenoid-to-alternator cable are about 23-1/8" apart. However, this cable does not "meter" power to the ammeter...it has virtually no resistance. Using a sensitive ohmmeter, we were only able to detect about .10Ω resistance between the point where it begins at the starter solenoid and where the shunt, or power diversion, is connected. Therefore, it appears that even though the yellow wire is connected in the middle of the solenoid-to-alternator cable, where the factory spliced it in, it would be just as effective to hook it up at the alternator itself at the FLD connection where the cable itself is attached.
This quote is from Keith's research on the factory ammeter wiring. My harness is a bit jury rigged and I'd like to get my factory (actually an F-600 set) ammeter working. If I understand this correctly, it seems pretty easy.I guess I can just run a wire from the ammeter to the starter side of the starter solenoid and another from the ammeter to the #10 wire that runs from the solenoid to the alternator (or directly to the Field on the alternator). Can it really be this easy?
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