On Wed, 29 Nov 2006, Mark Price wrote: > You can put as big an alternator on the engine as will fit. > The issues are size, wiring, need. Damn right!, unless you really need the capacity, and have massively rewired for it, it will be at least a waste, and at worst, a burned-up wiring harness. You stick a 100+ amp alternator in, it works fine, no problems for a year or two. Let's say one morning you find you left the lights on all night. Battery is dead, dead, dead, won't turn over. You get a jump start, starts up, you run fast-idle to charge up your battery with your huge alternator. 15 minutes later you have smoke, and a melted harness. The reason is, an alternator dumping 70, 80, 90, ... 140 amps into the battery will melt the (approx.) 12-gauge wire the factory installed with that original 37-amp Motorola. You need 4-gauge, or better, for 140 amps, and crimp connectors and such o match. Those are NOT conservative numbers for the sake of argument; they're actually on the small side. For a 140 amp alternator, 12-guage is too small even as a fusible link! I have a 60 amp "one wire" in my Rambler and Hornet simply because I could not find a smaller one! I'm running crimped and soldered 10-gauge wire from the alt directly to the hot side of the Ford-type starter solenoid. The Hornet has a terminal strip with 14-gauge fusible link to the accessory feed. _______________________________________________ AMC-List mailing list AMC-List@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list or go to http://www.amc-list.com