itchyfeet wrote:your voltmeter may be inaccurate
May I bang on again about those cheap Volt meters that can be miles out
itchyfeet wrote:and it matters where it's connected
Too true. I have a multi function do dah on top of my dash and the Volt meter part of it is not only inaccurate, but as it takes it's feed from a live wire from the fuse box, it ain't really reading
battery voltage, things like the ignition circuit, the lights, heater blower, wipers etc all drag the voltage at that point down quite a bit.
itchyfeet wrote:Try measuring volts with a multimeter at the alternator when running
And perhaps at the battery too. You should see more than 13.5 Volts at the battery (engine running), but measure it after a bit of a drive. If it's less than that, consider getting a replacement brush pack for your alternator. You can get them up to 14.5 Volts these days (and that is the one to go for). Get a decent make like Beru. Cost about £15 and take 15 minutes to fit, max.
All this is assuming you own a half decent multimeter of course
