yeah i will have to do that.the recall is the ball joints corroding isnt it?
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yeah i will have to do that.the recall is the ball joints corroding isnt it?
noises can be anything. i would get it done though
+1.
My G's RPMs also drop a lot under heavy electrical load when I first crank it up in the very cold mornings, but it goes away after the engine warms up. My alternator is very, very old and beat up though. It's cracked in like 10 different places from the previous owner's 45mph accident T-boning a car. :012: So what I'm trying to say I guess is that any properly-functioning alternator, old or new, should do this.
Is it really idling at 200rpms...seriously? I wouldn't think that the engine would run at all if it were turning over that slow. My normal idle is 750. With full electrical load, my V-belt shrieks and my engine idle drops to ~500. Just trying to give a ballpark figure.
galantwas free, i am willing to bet the tension on your belt is too loose. that what mine does, once the car warms up it doesnt do it any more and it only makes noise when its cold out.
you will get an rpm drop w/ electrical loads on @ idle, esp w/ your foot on the brake. i did a test w/ mine years ago in this condition; the alternator was not able to supply enough current, my dc amp-clamp showed 5 to 10 amps being drawn from the battery...so if you're sitting in traffic with everything on and a marginal battery, you could kill it.........it happend to us! it's a design thing w/ this alternator.......you just have to be aware and keep a good battery and all is ok
the front suspension recall is important..........i did mine right after the right wheel folded under when making a hard turn in a parking lot.......hate to think if we had been on the road...
(Sorry OP, I'm not trying to jack your thread!) The problem is, I have to adjust this tensioner about once a month or so. If I do not open the hood and put more tension on it, it gets worse and worse. The "lock bolt" that locks the tension bolt in place is as tight as I can get it without stripping threads. I'll make the belt tension very, very tight one week and then a month later it's back to being slack again. So there's not much else I can really do except replace the mangled alternator. I believe the multiple cracks in the alternator housing are allowing it to move with respect to the bracket that mounts it. This is what's causing my belt squeal...or so I think anyway :icon_wink: