Pardon me if this is not the ideal place or a recent enough thread. I can tell the OP has great advice and helpful knowledge on these alternators.
My problem was low charging after about 5 minutes of running, 02 S80 T6 60,000 miles. Chose a new voltage regulator from IPD. Replaced the VR. Reconnected battery, got half a crank, then smoke rolling off the thick red wire at alternator! Pulled battery ground wire... Later I tried inspecting and testing with multimeter. Appeared to be direct short from B+/red cable connection and case on alternator. Low to zero resistance from B+ stud and casing were the same when I dismantled and reassembled the Regulator. Oh well, maybe strange but okay "short" was normal ... Nope! Half a crank (after systems charged and settled down) and smoke with glowing of the wires in my alternator! 2 burn attempts 1st cooked red wire at insulation by alternator. Second cooked alternator on the copper wiring inside!
Trying to find out why or how the alternator became shorted when regulator was replaced?
Is there likely massive damage in the alternator and should I worry about other systems?
Where can I get my alternator rebuilt, or is an OE replacement better?
Such a long ordeal and any help is greatly appreciated!
S80 - New voltage regulator kills alternator
S80 - New voltage regulator kills alternator
Last edited by matthew1 on 17 Oct 2016, 15:04, edited 1 time in total.
Reason: split from another thread, retitled
Reason: split from another thread, retitled
- packetfire
- Posts: 234
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- Year and Model: 2010 v50 2.4i
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At risk of seeming stupid, could the insulation around the red wire o-terminal have been damaged when you bolted it back on?
I ask because it looks like a clean slice on the black insulation in the photo, and I would not expect "melting" from heat of a dead short to make such a clean "cut".
I ask because it looks like a clean slice on the black insulation in the photo, and I would not expect "melting" from heat of a dead short to make such a clean "cut".
1982 240DL: Drove it 32 years and 1.5 million miles (sold, even still had mint leather!)
2001 v70 2.4T: The most expensive $1500 car I ever bought ("Volvo Turbo" - what an oxymoron!) (sold)
2004 v70: Far less fatally-flawed v70 - It served well (sold)
2010 v50: Smaller, slightly sportier wagon. Its got a spoiler, so I upgraded with sway bars!
2001 v70 2.4T: The most expensive $1500 car I ever bought ("Volvo Turbo" - what an oxymoron!) (sold)
2004 v70: Far less fatally-flawed v70 - It served well (sold)
2010 v50: Smaller, slightly sportier wagon. Its got a spoiler, so I upgraded with sway bars!
- oragex
- Posts: 5347
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I'd rather purchase a used alternator, aftermarket regulators are known to be problematic.
Several Volvo Repair Videos https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=P ... s0FSVSOT_c
- xiami
- Posts: 19
- Joined: 24 November 2012
- Year and Model: 2002 S80 T6
- Location: Philadelphia
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I have S80 T6 148,940 miles. Alternator bearing was making noise. I took it to Pequea Alternator Shop in Lancaster, PA and they replaced the bearing, regulator and cleanned/sanded rings etc for $102.24 Shop has been in business for many years and they stand behind their work. Better than buying a whole new alternator.
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