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output voltage of an alternator?

Fullmetal Chocobo

Moderator<br>Distributed Computing
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Is there a standard voldtage for charing the batterieis in a car? I'm guessing it would be the alternator output voltrage, but I'm not sure.

EDIT: This is going to be for a solar panel mod, so I need an accurate as possible measurement. If someone could check with a DMM, that would be awesome, but I have no idea if that is even possible.
 
13.6 at the low end. 15.2 at the high end. But Gillbot is correct, 14.7 is the prefered voltage. At least these were the limits when I was a mechanic. (Which has been a few decades now....) I don't think car batteries have changed much since then though....
 
Originally posted by: IGBT
Originally posted by: Gillbot
The standard output of an alternator is usually rated at 14.7 volts.


..is that pulsating dc?

The output of an alternator is 3 phase bridge rectified. So its liked the chopped up tops of sine waves. Pulsating in that sense, not a PWM or square wave. Typically you don't see this because it is connected to a battery, which tends to act like a large capacitor and smooths between them. If you had one on the bench, w/o a battery on the output side and a field voltage available, you'd see what I'm saying.
 
Excellent -- thanks for the info. Would 14.7 VDC be abel to charge a standard car battery, and is there any kind of float charge capability?
 
Originally posted by: Fullmetal Chocobo
Excellent -- thanks for the info. Would 14.7 VDC be abel to charge a standard car battery, and is there any kind of float charge capability?

You can charge a standard car battery with less than 12v but you won't get maximum life. I keep a car battery as a hackjob UPS and it gets supplied with 11.88v. It runs my PC for hours without an issue.
 
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