matt dunn wrote:Actually been thinking about it more.
If you are actually getting 18 volts from the alternator the only culprit is the rotor inside the alternator itself is shorted.
Nothing in the wiring can cause it to go that high.
Normal charge is between 13.8 and 15.0 depending on the actual regulator,
incorrectly wired they will overcharge but to a maximum of 16V,
then the internal circuits in the regulator will stop it there no matter if the sensing wire is connected or not.
To get 18V the rotor is shorted so the regulator cannot control the voltage.
If you have the proper 4AGZE alt with the heavy bearing and the long shafted rotor from the AE92 or AE101 GTZ,
then it is a common problem with them.
They dont interchange with the NON gze ones and the rotors a specific to that model.
I think this is probably the explanation since I tried three different regulators on the same alternator. I thought that a faulty regulator was the only reason it would over charge.
Late last night I put a known good regulator (which was one of the three I tried) onto a spare alternator which I haven't used before and a quick check with revs to 3000rpm it did not give a warning and the factory gauge looked to be around 15V.
I couldn't test it any more than that because it was 11pm and the garage is directly below our bedroom and the wife was asleep...I hope anyway.
I'll test drive it tonight and hopefully it is sorted.
Good to know that the alternator rotor itself can be another cause rather than just the voltage regulator.
I think I'll get the old one rebuilt anyway just as a spare.
Thanks for the info guys, I was ready to start tracking all the wires looking for a short or bad ground.
Fingers crossed its sorted with test drive tonight.