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Running norcild 1200 off the alternator

islandvagabonds
Explorer
Explorer
I have just replaced my second alternator in seven years (50k miles).
I have occasionally run the fridge on invertor while driving at high altitudes. The 425 watt heaters should draw about 45amps at 12 volts. Adding 10 to 15 amps for chassis demands total altrnatorload should be 60+-. The alternator on the cat diesel is supposedly rated to 160amps.
Am I expecting too much from the altrnator?
What are others experiences with this?
Thanks for the feedback.
Bob
12 REPLIES 12

islandvagabonds
Explorer
Explorer
The shop ran new wires from the alt B÷ to the chassis batt and the pos side of the starter solenoid. Also new ground wires to the chassis ground post and the neg chassis batteries. A bit of overkill but everything works and I do like redundancy.
The failure was total, no output. I am starting to think the wiring may have been the issue to start with.
Thanks for all your comments. We all learn on the forum which makes it a wonderful resource for all of us.

Keep well my friends!
Bob

wolfe10
Explorer
Explorer
Have also seen bad battery isolators diagnosed as bad alternators.

Same for broken "sense wire"

Bottom line is diagnose the root cause!
Brett Wolfe
Ex: 2003 Alpine 38'FDDS
Ex: 1997 Safari 35'
Ex: 1993 Foretravel U240

Diesel RV Club:http://www.dieselrvclub.org/

theoldwizard1
Explorer II
Explorer II
islandvagabonds wrote:
I have occasionally run the fridge on inverter while driving at high altitudes. The 425 watt heaters should draw about 45amps at 12 volts. Adding 10 to 15 amps for chassis demands total altrnatorload should be 60+-. The alternator on the cat diesel is supposedly rated to 160amps.

No that alternator should handle it just fine.

Why did you come to the conclusion the alternator is bad ? Low voltage ? If so, it is either the diodes of the voltage regulator inside of the alternator. If you are handy enough to replace and alternator, you are handy enough to replace the voltage regulator.

The rest of the major parts (bearing, slip rings, brushes, windings) in an alternator last a long, LONG.

islandvagabonds
Explorer
Explorer
Thanks for all the feedback.
I tried running the fridge on gas while driving above 5500 feet and it did not cool well so I switched to AC as the manual recmmends. It was a bit cooler but not as good as my old 1200. This is a brand new 1210. The old one had a six year Amish unit that nearly burned up my coach. I know I should have gone with a residential unit.
By the way the alternator did not fail while operating on ac while driving.

Stim
Explorer
Explorer
What failed on the alternator?
That's where I would start, they are pretty simple and the failure might point to the problem.

grldst
Explorer
Explorer
Likely you have a Leece Neville alternator. Not the best for running long periods with a heavy amp load. I don't do it with that alternator because I have heard from others of having the same problem as you when trying to run the Fridge on AC.

GordonThree
Explorer
Explorer
Do you have room on the motor to mount a second alternator? Leave the OEM alternator alone for running its intended loads, and a second high duty-cycle alternator for charging the house batteries and powering the inverter?
2013 KZ Sportsmen Classic 200, 20 ft TT
2020 RAM 1500, 5.7 4x4, 8 speed

pianotuna
Nomad III
Nomad III
Hi,

Look into the duty cycle of the alternator. In the past I'd run heavy loads such as the water heater, but I used a 1/3 duty cycle (i.e. 20 minutes on, and 40 minutes off).
Regards, Don
My ride is a 28 foot Class C, 256 watts solar, 556 amp-hours of Telcom jars, 3000 watt Magnum hybrid inverter, Sola Basic Autoformer, Microair Easy Start.

time2roll
Nomad
Nomad
I assume "2nd alternator in 7 yr 50k" includes oem and two replacements. That does seem excessive.

Only way I know to really check would be to get an ammeter on the alternator to monitor output while in transit. But really I would just let the fridge run on propane.

2oldman
Explorer II
Explorer II
The two previous posters seem confused in that you're talking about your inverter draw to run the refer heater on AC provided by the inverter.

My experience is to run the refer on gas.
"If I'm wearing long pants, I'm too far north" - 2oldman

dougrainer
Nomad
Nomad
The refer elements do NOT draw 12 volt DC power. 1200 models have 2 AC elements and they pull 1.7 amps AC EACH for a draw of 3.4 amps AC. That is 408 WATTS AC . Your Inverter has MORE than enough power to run the AC elements and it will not cause failures of Alternators. If you have premature failure of Alternators, something else is causing it. 7 years and 50k sounds like a good run for an Alternator on a Diesel motorhome. Doug

MountainAir05
Explorer II
Explorer II
You model unless I am reading wrong is AC for the heater You get better cooling with gas. Your inverter also draws. But to answer your question unless your inverter is drawing too much then no unless you are near the max draw all the time. I figure around 5 amp plus what the inverter draws.