I thought I would pass on this (expensively) gained piece of wisdom in case it helps someone else.
I have just shelled out £200 for an alternator I do not believe I needed, after it was connected the battery was still not charging and it was eventually traced to a faulty connection in a terminal block.
When you check the aternator do not just check the voltage at the alternater terminal or battery terminal - measure to see if there is any voltage between these 2 terminals.
0 volts would normally be good and any voltage indicates a bad connection.
I am electrically competent and am kicking myself for not checking this myself!
I have just shelled out £200 for an alternator I do not believe I needed, after it was connected the battery was still not charging and it was eventually traced to a faulty connection in a terminal block.
When you check the aternator do not just check the voltage at the alternater terminal or battery terminal - measure to see if there is any voltage between these 2 terminals.
0 volts would normally be good and any voltage indicates a bad connection.
I am electrically competent and am kicking myself for not checking this myself!