68F250 wrote:The gauge should work fine, it doesn't know what kind of alternator is connected. Use the existing harness but only connect the heavy alternator output wire, fold back and tape up the other wires.
I knew I mentioned it before. Sorry I don't think I explained it well enough why it needs to be used.
Here's the deal, trucks with an ammeter are the only ones with this red/green stripe wire (cars too). This wire connects to the 'S' terminal on the regulator to energize the charging system. The 'S' terminal on the alternator is not used. That's all the wire does. It gets it's power from the ignition switch, the same point that the resistor wire does.
There is an additional shunt circuit in the harness from the alternator to the starter solenoid that runs the ammeter. You need the ammeter connected to that shunt circuit and also the heavy wire connected to the alternator output and the starter solenoid. That's why you have to use the existing harness.
Trucks without an ammeter use the 'S' terminal on the alternator to feed the idiot light which then feeds the 'S' terminal on the regulator to energize the charging system.
I hate to say this but even when these trucks were brand new, the ammeter hardly deflected at all. It's just the way they were. Hate to see you go thru so much trouble only to get a tiny deflection. Ya know what, since you've run all new wires anyway, it would be ideal just to redesign a new shunt and make your meter work like it should have.
The car line with ammeters had the same inherent low deflection, there were some service bulletins about it. The answer was to explain to customers that that's the way it is. Funny thing though, I guess enough Tbird owners complained because they eventually got one that was redesigned to deflect a lot, a whole lot. It would peg after startup. Then there's another service bulletin after that to explain to Tbird owners that the wide deflection was normal. Kinda amusing.