Radio Guy
Well-Known Member
On older vehicles with metal dashes (during my car stereo installer days) it was very difficult to float or not ground a particular component due to all the exposed metal surfaces. Today its much easier to isolate components with mostly plastic interiors, but the ground loop isolator is still a standard item in most car stereo installs these days. Even if you isolate the components from ground and run a dedicated ground wire to a common point you can still have alternator whine creep in. Just get a ground loop isolator for your interconnect cables and enjoy a more simple install.
Sounds like why the guys I dealt with when buying equipment always advocating taking components to the same ground point - don't ground one thing at the dash and another under the hood and another in the rear of the vehicle. They said ground to the same point, a common ground. I recall them advising me years ago "avoid ground loops"
"Bad alternator" - typically diode (weak, bad) or stator issues.
All can be fixed.
When an alternator is fully loaded like I do on my test stand you can sometimes hear the problem in an audible whine coming from the alternator itself.
On these you'd probably know if there was an alternator issue - they would likely have trouble keeping up with full loads. Watch for abnormally low voltages.
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