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C.E. Niehoff & Co. C702D Troubleshooting Guides User Manual

Page 4

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Page 4

TG65A

Section C: Advanced Troubleshooting

A2-332 Regulator
Description and Operation

A2-332 regulator is attached directly to the outside of

alternator.
Main diagnostic feature of the regulator is a tricolored

LED next to the harness receptacle on regulator. LED

works like a voltmeter, measuring charging voltage. See

Table 2 for diagnostic features and LED explanations.
This regulator has OVCO (overvoltage cutout) that will

trip at vehicle electrical system voltage above 33 volts

that exists longer than 3 seconds. OVCO feature detects

high voltage and reacts by signaling field circuit to open.

This turns off alternator (LED is flashing RED). OVCO

circuit is reset when engine is restarted.

LED COLOR

STATUS

TABLE 2 – A2-332 Regulator Diagnostics

Alternator and regulator operating normally.

GREEN

Solid

Low system voltage — Electrical load exceeds
alternator rating at present rotor speed.

ACTION

No action required.

When loads decrease or speed increases, LED
should be solid GREEN. If not, check drive belt
and charging system connections.

AMBER

Solid

High system voltage – May occur during
normal load switching.

If solid more than 3 seconds, OVCO will trip,
disabling charging system. LED will flash RED.
Overvoltage condition. Attempt reset. System
diagnosis required. Go to Chart 1, page 5.

RED

Solid

Alternator fault — No output.

Flashing

Flashing

OVCO tripped.

Troubleshooting

Shut down vehicle and restart engine. If alternator

functions normally after restart, a “no output condition”

was normal response of voltage regulator to “high volt-

age” condition. Inspect condition of electrical system,

including loose battery cables, both positive and

negative. If battery disconnects from system, it could

cause “high voltage” condition in electrical system,

causing OVCO circuit to trip.
If you have reset alternator once, and electrical system

returns to normal charge voltage condition, there may

have been a one time, high voltage spike, causing OVCO

circuit to trip.
If OVCO circuit repeats cutout a second time in short

succession and shuts off alternator field circuit, try

third restart. If OVCO circuit repeats cutout, go to Chart

1, page 5.

Replace alternator.