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Axle mounted alternator?

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by StinkBug, Aug 21, 2010.

  1. StinkBug
    Joined: Aug 5, 2010
    Posts: 14

    StinkBug
    Member
    from San Diego

    I while back I remember seeing a pic somewhere of a car that had the alternator mounted to the rear axle, with a pulley mounted to the driveshaft flange to spin the belt, and run the alternator.

    Obviously this means you're only gonna be charging while you're in motion, but I'm wondering if this setup can be at all practical for a car that actually gets driven regularly. The reason I'm thinkin of this is because I'm planning on running an electric water pump on my next project, and the only other accessory is the alternator. If it can be mounted to the driveline it'll shorten the motor by several inches, and there will be no visible belts under the hood at all.

    If you were to run a high end AGM battery, with plenty of reserve amps, and your only power draws are a fuel pump, EFI computer system, and lights, would this setup get you by? Also when you're in 1st and 2nd gear the alternator is gonna be spinning slower than the engine, and with an OD tranny at freeway speeds it could see higher speeds than normal. Does anyone know the real RPM range of a GM alternator?

    More importantly has anyone actually run this setup? How does it work?
     
  2. CShroom
    Joined: Mar 25, 2009
    Posts: 127

    CShroom
    Member

    I wouldn't worry about it if you were in middle of nowhere Kansas. Some place far and away from traffic jams.

    But not so sure about San Diego or any major city. Stop and go traffic I would assume would be too much load on battery only.
     
  3. bbc 1957 gasser
    Joined: Aug 3, 2007
    Posts: 683

    bbc 1957 gasser
    Member

    speedway motors sells this kit they say it will only charge at highway speeds .
    just low mount it on the driverside of the motor with a short belt off the crank .
    that how i run mine on my drag car with elc.pump .
     
  4. i've done it with no problems. this has been covered many times before , if i wasn't so lazy right now i would find the threads
     

  5. nwbhotrod
    Joined: Oct 13, 2009
    Posts: 1,243

    nwbhotrod
    Member
    from wash state

    I once saw a water pump with a built in alternator it was very cool
     
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  6. ScottV
    Joined: Jul 18, 2009
    Posts: 818

    ScottV
    Member

    Just a thought / question on this, wouldn't this be best if you used a good quality deep cycle battery like an Optima yellow top ???
     
  7. StinkBug
    Joined: Aug 5, 2010
    Posts: 14

    StinkBug
    Member
    from San Diego

    I wouldn't call anything with the Optima name on it good quality these days. Their quality has gone WAY downhill in recent years.

    If I were to do this I'd be using one of the XS Power gel cell batteries. They are about half the size of an optima, and have proven to have far more power and durability in our off road race cars.

    36-3window, what kinda driving do you do with your car? Any traffic/city type driving? Most of the time this car will be going for short trips around town, or on the freeway and will be avoiding high traffic times whenever possible. Since I work from home commuting in traffic is not really an issue for me.

    Obviously I could mount it low, or high, or anywhere, but the whole idea is that I could get rid of all accessories under the hood and make some extra space.
     
  8. I ran that same set up on my street driven '32 roadster with a sbc for three years.
    I ran the electric water pump and hung the alternator on a bracket off the differential and a pulley on the rear u-joint.
    Looked killer.............it also was a perpetual battery killer.
    The pulley would never spin the alternator fast enough, nor would it spin it long enough in heavy traffic.
    I had to trickle charge the battery after driving it constantly, always carried a jumper pack, and it would die out at the worst times.
    It was a total flop for drive-ability but always drew comments at shows and cruise nights.
    I never could predict when it might not start. I finally smartened up and dumped the whole set-up.
    DON'T DO IT!
     
    Last edited: Aug 21, 2010
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  9. UnsettledParadox
    Joined: Apr 25, 2007
    Posts: 1,107

    UnsettledParadox
    Member

    i wouldnt think it would work much for a street driven car because if you think about how many rpms an alternator makes on a motor vs how many rpms while driving, theres a huge deficit
     
  10. "free up some space under the hood"....for what? A friend of mine has a V6-71 blown SBC in an "A" coupe, not a lot of room. He ended up going with a tiny little alt off some import, runs it off the crank and mounted it down low on the drivers side. I have no idea what the alt is from, but I can tell you it is TINY. Might be better off going with something along this route rather than off the d-shaft.
     
  11. fordcragar
    Joined: Dec 28, 2005
    Posts: 3,198

    fordcragar
    Member
    from Yakima WA.

  12. 39 All Ford
    Joined: Sep 15, 2008
    Posts: 1,530

    39 All Ford
    Member
    from Benton AR

    I know, you can try one of those new electric powered alternators.....

    uh.... never mind....
     
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  13. Just had a thought How about a sprocket on the back of the flywheel and chain drive the altinator?
     
  14. brad chevy
    Joined: Nov 22, 2009
    Posts: 2,627

    brad chevy
    Member

    Practical for a trailer Queen but not for a regular driver.
     
  15. indyjps
    Joined: Feb 21, 2007
    Posts: 5,377

    indyjps
    Member

  16. Had a modern OT truck that had the alternator go bad,and it wouldnt run well enough on the battery to limp home.It took the whole 100 amp"s to make the system function.Installed a rebuilt in the parking lot,and the battery spun the engine over,and it ran fine.If a guy was running a magneto you could likely get away with the drive shaft mount.Saw a nice 34 Ford PU in Rod,and Custom about 50 years ago that had the alternator driven off the back of the drive shaft.No doubt no computer on board to keep happy.
     
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  17. The normal pulley ratio for an alternator is about 3 to 1 (8 inch crank pulley driving a 2.8 inch alternator pulley) so a crankshaft turning at 6000 rpm would be turning the alternator 18000 rpm. I don't think you could turn it too fast, your problem would be turning too slow unless you were at highway speed. Third gear on most older transmissions is 1 to 1 (direct) so at 2500 rpm at 60 mph in third your driveshaft speed would be 2500 rpm, no problem.
     
  18. Gearhead Graphics
    Joined: Oct 4, 2008
    Posts: 3,890

    Gearhead Graphics
    Member
    from Denver Co

    Some of the tiny alternators are on forklifts. They seem to put out enough juice too. I wouldn't do it. especially if you're talking about an electric fuel pump and an EFI (SHHHHHH) computer too.
    I have a small pc680 battery in my t bucket. All I have electrical in that car is lights and 2 heated seats. I have to keep it on the charger at home and carry a jump box with me. If you've got the seats on and the headlights on its gonna groan when you try to start it next time
     
  19. My guess is there's probably a reason Detroit makes them run off the crank pulley.
     
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  20. TCATTC
    Joined: Oct 12, 2019
    Posts: 283

    TCATTC
    Member

    Those differential drives were designed for race cars that ran wfo all night with like 6.50 gears/7000rpm
     
  21. KevKo
    Joined: Jun 25, 2009
    Posts: 931

    KevKo
    Member
    from Motown

    Not that handling is a huge concern, but mounting the alternator on the rear axle will increase un-sprung weight. That increase is harder to control. Yeah, not a great deal, but still.
     
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  22. Ned Ludd
    Joined: May 15, 2009
    Posts: 5,051

    Ned Ludd
    Member

    I've been entertaining a line of thought which got me to thinking that on many of our cars you might want ancillaries under the floor boards rather than at the front of the engine — perhaps accessed via a trap door in the floor? It suggests a line shaft running alongside the engine and gearbox, on the passenger side, with as many pulleys turning alternators, compressors, fuel pumps, scavenge pumps, heater fans, or whatever as you want, one behind the other.
    [​IMG]
    You'd have no more at the front of the engine than a belt drive similar to those of the cable-drive fuel pumps which have become a thing. Single-V, multi-V, or Gilmer would depend on the total of what you intend to drive. Of course it needn't have this billet look:
    [​IMG] [​IMG]
     
  23. Dave G in Gansevoort
    Joined: Mar 28, 2019
    Posts: 2,670

    Dave G in Gansevoort
    Member
    from Upstate NY

    NASCAR requires a cable driven fuel pump for their electronically controlled fuel injection on Cup cars, so thatthere won't be fuel fed to a fire in case of a crash and no cutout of an electric fuel pump. Might be something to investigate for driving an alternator. They had trouble the 1st season with some failures of the cable, but that doesn't seem to occur any more. Just a thought...
     
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  24. Guy Patterson
    Joined: Nov 27, 2020
    Posts: 372

    Guy Patterson

    Dave G do you have a link to images of the cable driven fuel pump?
     
  25. Paulz
    Joined: Dec 30, 2018
    Posts: 134

    Paulz
    Member

    I got yer line shaft driven alternators right here.
    lots of alternators.jpg
     
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  26. Fabulous50's
    Joined: Nov 18, 2017
    Posts: 513

    Fabulous50's
    Member
    from Maine

    Electric fuel pump, electric water pump, and EFI? um that's a lot of electric draw for something you would have a very marginal charging system on.
     
  27. Ned Ludd
    Joined: May 15, 2009
    Posts: 5,051

    Ned Ludd
    Member

    What's that in?
     
  28. Boneyard51
    Joined: Dec 10, 2017
    Posts: 6,451

    Boneyard51
    Member

    I would think the harshness of the axle going over bumps in the road would be detrimental to the alternator. But I have never done it....... probably won’t ever do it!






    Bones
     
  29. Mr48chev
    Joined: Dec 28, 2007
    Posts: 33,980

    Mr48chev
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    There are so many extremely small case alternators available for/on small cars now that put out good amps and could be low mounted where they were pretty well out of sight that hassles that would go with a differential mounted unit don't make putting one back there viable outside of impressing the mouth breathers at rod trots.

    Back when they came up with mounting them on the rear end there weren't any small case alternators around and not many low mount brackets.

    Some guys have been using Kubota tractor alternators but I can't find one that puts out over 40 amps and the little bitty one only puts out 14 amps.
     
  30. Stueeee
    Joined: Oct 21, 2015
    Posts: 308

    Stueeee
    Member
    from Kent, UK

    I've done two conversions on otherwise stock 1920s/30s cars where a Kubota alternator has been driven by a belt off the driveshaft. The owners were not prepared to have a modern alternator visible on their motors. Both conversions have worked (and are still working AFAIK) fine. The ammeter shows charge from about 20 MPH. But these cars don't have a high electrical demand, nowhere near the nominal 40A output of these Altys; it's also the case that this type of car is more likely to be found pottering around on country lanes than stuck in an urban traffic jam in the dark.

    Fitting the pulley on the stock driveshaft where the shaft diameter is smaller than either end of the driveshaft was a bit of "ship in a bottle" issue that needed solving:

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]
     
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