1971 Cuda, 440: Just recently on a Sunday drive (In the middle of the mountians with almost ZERO shoulder room to pull over).
I was about 60 miles from home, when the engine started to sputter and got progressively worse until it died. Battery was found to be about dead: Selenoid clicks, thats it, so it wouldn't turn over. I double checked all bat posts, relay, etc while stuck on the side of the road. On the spot I called it a charging issue, so i didnt want to jump start it and have die on the road again, especially when I was on an incline and on a tight mountian road with virtually zero shoulder to pull over on
No cell coverge, bottom line, I was able to get a tow to the local OReilleys.
My bat was dead, so I got another on purpose to just limp home with, about 70 miles away, on another, flatter and wider road : With a new battery, it started right up, ran great till I was almost home: Same symptoms, sputtering till it died, but I did JUST barely make it home. Def a charging system problem
At home, I checked every single related connection. At firewall, at regulator, and at the back of the alternator: All looked fine when removed
I recharged the new battery that night, and today it fired right up, ran fine to the local shop so I could have the charging system analyzed: Battery was good, hand analyzer said "low regulator output". I also had the alternator checked out/bench tested: Alternator was good
So I went ahead and got a new voltage regulator: Found out then, the old regulator was very loosley mounted on the firewall. The mount bolts had basically just worn loose in the mount holes, and the regulator could def be wiggled around by hand
I installed the new regulator, and put in larger bolts to ensure secure mounting and grounding of the regulator body
Question: Does the regulator body need good and solid grounding to work properly and did the poor/loose mounting possibly cause my charging issue?