Chances are that you have a loose connection. Loose connections = resistance, which = heat. I'd clean up that gooey mess and clean the other end of the alternator charge cable at the PDC terminal. The PDC is a connection known to become resistive. And the stock charge cable sucks. The PDC connection being screw up can cause some really strange issues with the car.GToddyT5 said:I think I may have found the problem. I was looking under the hood right after my car died because I thought my intake hose popped off again. So I looked at the back of my alternator and the wire was dead hot. The rubber boot was pretty much cooking on the terminal and the nut was covered with rubber. What would cause this? Why is it drawing that much power?
Danman765432 said:also check your hot alternator wire...the one that goes from the back of the alternator over to the fuse box...when that comes loose on my car...i have the same thing happen
It's a remanufactured stock one. It's only about 3 months old.Danman765432 said:also just wondering how many amps is your alternator or is it the stock 130 amp one
What does PDC stand for?HISSIN50 said:Chances are that you have a loose connection. Loose connections = resistance, which = heat. I'd clean up that gooey mess and clean the other end of the alternator charge cable at the PDC terminal. The PDC is a connection known to become resistive. And the stock charge cable sucks. The PDC connection being screw up can cause some really strange issues with the car.
Good luck.
Power Distribution Center.GToddyT5 said:What does PDC stand for?
Two too many.HISSIN50 said:Power Distribution Center.
If you ever had a fox, it's like the battery lug on the starter solenoid.
OK, so I pulled the cover off of where the power connects to the power distribution box and the terminal is clean. I traced the wire back through where it connects to the two white wires and those are both fine as well. I'm confused here, should I just run a new cable?HISSIN50 said:Power Distribution Center.
On the side of the underhood fusebox is where the alternator charge wire attaches (along with the positive battery cable). If you ever had a fox, it's like the battery lug on the starter solenoid.
I missed the rear battery info before. Achieving a decent ground in the back of the car is problematic for some (see Badstang's set-up for an overkill way to do it). Nice work with the new ground cable.GToddyT5 said:I had the local stereo shop make me a 4 gauge cable, so I'm going to see if that makes a difference. I also cleaned up my connections in the trunk where the battery grounds to the chassis. There was a lot of battery dust on it.
I'm not sure I follow but will try and give some observations. If you have a new charge cable for the alternator (4 AWG or numerically smaller cable) to the PDC, it can indeed replace the stock charge cable. I did this because the stock cable looked like poop and was dropping 400 mV.GToddyT5 said:Tried driving it again today and it would start and then cut off, so obviously the connection with the new wire was no good. But I'm wondering why it didn't work. I was looking at the wiring diagram and it seems like that wire connects to the alternator on one side, splits into two white wires with fusible links and then connects right up to the PDB. So why wouldn't the new one work properly if I connected it straight up?