Car Alternator Output: Voltage Decrease in Heavy Loads

AI Thread Summary
When a heavy load is placed on a car's alternator, the voltage can decrease despite an increase in current output. This occurs due to the output impedance associated with the voltage source, where a heavier load (lower resistance) causes a larger voltage drop across the alternator's impedance. A more robust power supply typically has lower output impedance, allowing it to maintain voltage until it reaches current limit or the input voltage drops below the regulator's minimum. The discussion highlights that while a higher output alternator is designed to handle increased loads, it still faces inherent impedance challenges. Understanding these dynamics is crucial for optimizing alternator performance under heavy loads.
thkking
Messages
2
Reaction score
0
Hi.
I have what seems like an easy question, but I'm having trouble answering it myself.

As say a standard 3-phase car alternator has a heavy load placed on it, the voltage regulator would increase the current into the windings creating a greater magnetic field and thus increasing alternator current output.
But why would voltage decrease through the car as the load became heavy?
It would seem that the voltage would increase (or at least maintain it's maximum regulated level) as alternator current output increased, until the maximum regulated alternator output was reached, and at that point would still be maximum.
Thanks for any info.
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
It is because any voltage source has an associated output impedance. As the load becomes heavier (lower resistance), the increased current drawn by the load generates a larger voltage drop across the source impedance of the power source (in your case the alternator & voltage regulator), so the output voltage seen at the power supply terminals droops.

The beefier the power supply, the lower the output impedance. And when there is a voltage regulator in series with the power source, the regulator will have a fairly low output impedance (and hold the output voltage pretty steady), up until the point where the regulator goes into current limit (to protect itself from overheating), or until the input voltage to the regulator from the power source drops below the minimum input voltage of the regulator.
 
That makes total sense.
That’s what I was thinking, but it seemed too easy, lol, and my linear thinking was that as the alternator’s nominal output is going to be increased (as you said “beefier”) the impedance is increased…but then again it wouldn’t make sense to purchase a high output alternator if the impedance was increased with design. :smile:
Thank you.
 
Thread 'I need a concave mirror with a focal length length of 150 feet'
I need to cut down a 3 year old dead tree from top down so tree causes no damage with small pieces falling. I need a mirror with a focal length of 150 ft. 12" diameter to 36" diameter will work good but I can't think of any easy way to build it. Nothing like this for sale on Ebay. I have a 30" Fresnel lens that I use to burn stumps it works great. Tree service wants $2000.
Hi all, i have some questions about the tesla turbine: is a tesla turbine more efficient than a steam engine or a stirling engine ? about the discs of the tesla turbine warping because of the high speed rotations; does running the engine on a lower speed solve that or will the discs warp anyway after time ? what is the difference in efficiency between the tesla turbine running at high speed and running it at a lower speed ( as fast as possible but low enough to not warp de discs) and: i...
Back
Top