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Wiring Question

Zeus51

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It seems I never have to post anything unless it’s a wiring question. I have had a m1008 for 10 years with no real issues. I have recently acquired a m1009. The previous owner says he converted to 12v but it looks like all he did was disconnect the gen 2 wiring and remove the alt. I have reinstalled a known running gen 2 from a donor m1009 I also have. I traced the wiring to make sure it was solid. I also replaced the gen 1 with a known working gen 1 alternator from my donor. When I disconnect the white clips with the red and brown wires off the alternators, both gen 1 and 2 pass the key on/off test. And both alt’s have the appropriate 12/24v to the post. And the batteries are fully charged reading 12.4v. I have done the Doghead relay and glow plug switch. Since completing all this, the truck would crank and run but the gen 1 light wouldn’t go off and the gen 1 alternator wasn’t charging the front battery. Gen 2 seemed to be working and rear battery was reading 14.6v while running.

Today, I cleaned some terminals and tried to crank it. It wouldn’t crank and the engine grounding strap on the back passenger side of the engine got super hot and started smoking. So I immediately turned it off. before I start purchasing a new grounding strap and troubleshooting blindly, I thought I’d ask opinions on what I should do?
 

porkysplace

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It seems I never have to post anything unless it’s a wiring question. I have had a m1008 for 10 years with no real issues. I have recently acquired a m1009. The previous owner says he converted to 12v but it looks like all he did was disconnect the gen 2 wiring and remove the alt. I have reinstalled a known running gen 2 from a donor m1009 I also have. I traced the wiring to make sure it was solid. I also replaced the gen 1 with a known working gen 1 alternator from my donor. When I disconnect the white clips with the red and brown wires off the alternators, both gen 1 and 2 pass the key on/off test. And both alt’s have the appropriate 12/24v to the post. And the batteries are fully charged reading 12.4v. I have done the Doghead relay and glow plug switch. Since completing all this, the truck would crank and run but the gen 1 light wouldn’t go off and the gen 1 alternator wasn’t charging the front battery. Gen 2 seemed to be working and rear battery was reading 14.6v while running.

Today, I cleaned some terminals and tried to crank it. It wouldn’t crank and the engine grounding strap on the back passenger side of the engine got super hot and started smoking. So I immediately turned it off. before I start purchasing a new grounding strap and troubleshooting blindly, I thought I’d ask opinions on what I should do?
Did you put a 24v starter on it or are feeding 24v into a 12v starter ?
 

87cr250r

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In addition to the braided grounding strap that connects between the engine and body, there should also be a battery cable between the 24 volt terminal strip and the engine block as well. This battery cable is necessary to carry the starter current.
 

Zeus51

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Location
Birmingham, AL
Did you put a 24v starter on it or are feeding 24v into a 12v starter ?
I asked the guy if he swapped the starter to 12v when he did conversion. His answer was no which confuses me a little bc he had it connected to a 12 volt terminal. I did check that terminal before dismantling what he had done. Maybe the starter was getting just enough juice to turn over?
 

Zeus51

Active member
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Location
Birmingham, AL
In addition to the braided grounding strap that connects between the engine and body, there should also be a battery cable between the 24 volt terminal strip and the engine block as well. This battery cable is necessary to carry the starter current.
you mean: coming off the same terminal that the grounding strap terminates at on the engine? Yes. There is a grounding cable that also connects there and goes to the ground block on the firewall. That same bolt also has a small black wire connected there that I think is a splice from the diagnostics? Does that sound correct?
 

nyoffroad

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Rochester NY
I asked the guy if he swapped the starter to 12v when he did conversion. His answer was no which confuses me a little bc he had it connected to a 12 volt terminal. I did check that terminal before dismantling what he had done. Maybe the starter was getting just enough juice to turn over?
Based on what little experience I've had seeing 24 volt starters getting just 12 volts is that they don't work at all! This might be an anomaly but in both cases the solenoid would kick the starter gear out and then try to turn the engine but couldn't, leaving the starter drive engaged and acting like the engine was seized. With that in mind I think you have a 12 volt starter.
 

Zeus51

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Location
Birmingham, AL
Based on what little experience I've had seeing 24 volt starters getting just 12 volts is that they don't work at all! This might be an anomaly but in both cases the solenoid would kick the starter gear out and then try to turn the engine but couldn't, leaving the starter drive engaged and acting like the engine was seized. With that in mind I think you have a 12 volt starter.
hmmm. When you put it that way, now I feel like a dummy for assuming something that in hindsite doesn’t make any sense. Haha! That’s an easy fix. When I get home, I’ll try using 12v and report back.
 

87cr250r

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The top large lug on the solenoid is connected directly to battery + and is always live. You can measure the voltage to the starter there. There should be a nameplate on the starter that says what voltage it is. There should also be voltage numbers stamped into the solenoid but these will be hard to see with the starter installed.
 

Zeus51

Active member
114
35
28
Location
Birmingham, AL
The top large lug on the solenoid is connected directly to battery + and is always live. You can measure the voltage to the starter there. There should be a nameplate on the starter that says what voltage it is. There should also be voltage numbers stamped into the solenoid but these will be hard to see with the starter installed.
The top large lug on the solenoid is connected directly to battery + and is always live. You can measure the voltage to the starter there. There should be a nameplate on the starter that says what voltage it is. There should also be voltage numbers stamped into the solenoid but these will be hard to see with the starter installed.
the large lug measures 24v. I took pics to judge the starter but I didn’t see the text you refer to
 

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porkysplace

Well-known member
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Location
mid- michigan
the large lug measures 24v. I took pics to judge the starter but I didn’t see the text you refer to
Do you have other stock CUCV's ? ...... swap a starter off one of them or pull that starter and search the numbers on it to find out if it is 12 v or 24 v. This is why most people run far and fast from 12v conversions , for the most part your on your own trying to figure out what Bubba did . The Rosscommon conversion at least has a wiring diagram .
 

Zeus51

Active member
114
35
28
Location
Birmingham, AL
Do you have other stock CUCV's ? ...... swap a starter off one of them or pull that starter and search the numbers on it to find out if it is 12 v or 24 v. This is why most people run far and fast from 12v conversions , for the most part your on your own trying to figure out what Bubba did . The Rosscommon conversion at least has a wiring diagram .
Yeah, I’ve got a donor that’s definitely a 24v starter. I’ll probably just swap them. Especially after looking at the pics and noticing the purple exciter wire terminal is busted on the solenoid. BUT!!!

I did just say the hell with it and swapped the starter wire to a 12v terminal on a battery since the previous guy had it 12v. It cranked right up. The braided ground strap still had slight smoking for 1-2 secs then stopped. And was cool to touch in 5 mins of running it. And somehow, both batteries were charging this time.

I don’t think I’m over this issue yet. I just think the electrical gremlins weren’t pissed off before this crank.
 

adf5565

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Tioga, PA
I know right? I got this thing and immediately dove into the issues. I only drove it down my driveway. So I’ve only cranked it once before popping the hood and starting to work
Hopefully nothing else too major after you work through this issue.
 

nyoffroad

Well-known member
910
629
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Location
Rochester NY
The top large lug on the solenoid is connected directly to battery + and is always live. You can measure the voltage to the starter there. There should be a nameplate on the starter that says what voltage it is. There should also be voltage numbers stamped into the solenoid but these will be hard to see with the starter installed.
"there should be a nameplate" Really? I've never seen one before, just the 24V stamped on the solenoid. I always thought there should be a better way!
 

Zeus51

Active member
114
35
28
Location
Birmingham, AL
Going back to the engine grounding terminal on the back of the passenger side head with the firewall grounding strap attached to.

There is a grounding cable that goes to the grounding block on the firewall. But there is also a mystery black wire coming out of the wiring harness and terminating on the engines ground terminal along with the other two.

I can’t find it on the wiring diagrams. What does that black wire go to?
 
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