Flyin Ryan
hated cuz he drives fords
Run a ground from your alternator housing to your frame to pickup some extra juice from your alt 
DaveP said:WHAT???
This suggestion makes almost no sense. In a stock truck (with the battery under the hood, and grounded to the engine), the only electrical 'load' the frame is conducting is the fuel pump, and in a Syclone, the rear lights. Probably 3-5 amps maximum.
There is a ground wire from the core support above RH headlight, to the top of the frame rail directly below the battery. This wire is adequate for the 3-5 amp load of the fuel pump and Syclone rear lighting. No additional ground is needed on a stock truck, as long as these are OK.
NOW: A lot of guys relocate the battery. And I don't think many of them know enough automotive electrical theory to do this "correctly". Ie, have it work without causing problems or issues. The most common "effect" of doing this incorrectly is a burned shifter cable. The guys on here that seem to have chronic electrical issues, have a battery re-locate.
While I have never done a battery re-locate in a SyTy, I've done tons of them in Yachts from 40 to 125 feet. My suggestion for ground cable from the battery would be a #2 AWG min connected to the Transmission Mount bolt that holds the mount to the trans case. This way the frame is never carrying the starter or charging loads. Connections won't become 'resistive' causing voltage drops or intermittant connection problems. This location is easy and closest to the battery in the rear.
With a relocate, don't forget to run a jumper from the engine to the core support ground above the RH headlight. An alternative would be jumper from the trans mount location above, to the mount stud on the crossmember ("around" the rubber of the trans mount). This might be cleaner, easier and just as effective.
The alternator has a very effective ground connection to its mount. The alternator output is rarley, if ever, as much as the starter load. Keep the cables as short and direct as possible on a relocate. And the stock system is fine as engineered, if it's in good condition, and not 'hacked up'. I just don't see where a ground from the alternator to the frame makes any sense. There are much 'better' ways to do it.
Dave
DaveP said:This thread WAS headed for the vault. But with the use of the word "disagree" it instantly became another piece of inane opinionated supposition. Not worthy of the vault.dgoodhue said:I disgree with some of this.
DaveP said:Sorry for the rant. But I'm pissed that this "know-it-all" ****ed up what should have been an informative, matter-of-fact thread that could have been preserved for future reference. Instead it's just meaningless BS. Now I've added to the BS. Sorry. DP
dgoodhue said:I do agree at idle a stock truck doesn't need more output, however at WOT we do see voltage drop by more than 1 volt at the ECM.
DaveP said:Please. DO TELL. How grounding the *ucking frame can influence (improve) this voltage reading. (I'm assuming on datamaster, scan tool, etc)? Be careful. It DOESN'T. And the way I'll explain why it doesn't (can't) will make sense to anyone that can read.
dgoodhue said:The RH headlight core support ground is for the headlights and horn.
DaveP said:You sure? It also has the wire from the battery Neg cable under it. THEN it goes to the frame.
dgoodhue said:I imagine fuel pump is ground through the frame (passenger side front) to the battery.
DaveP said:It doesn't. I didn't "imagine" anything when I wrote this. I had just gone out and looked under the hood of my two trucks to verify how it was configured, when I was unable to find anything in the Helms manuals.
DaveP said:OK. Here's the crux of our disagreement: I HATE "connections". CONNECTIONS ARE THE #1 CAUSE OF ELECTRICAL PROBLEMS!!! The wire doesn't fail. The terminal doesn't [usually] fall off. The CONNECTION goes bad. It gets loose, corrodes, whatever, and it becomes resistive, causing voltage drop, or intermittent problems.
I suggested going directly to the transmission from the battery. (ONE connection). You suggested battery to frame, then a jumper from frame to engine. (THREE connections). Your suggestion contains THREE TIMES the potential failure modes as mine.
dgoodhue said:Make sure though the ground is connected to the main frame rails in our trucks (I would even connect the frame rails together with a wire if the ground is on the opposite side from the engine block ground) The support frame rails are riveted/bolted (and the frame is wax coated) that connects them to the frame, these could interfere with a clean ground path back to the battery.
DaveP said:This paragraph is what set me off. WTF? You advocate how GREAT the frame is, then stipulate: "(I would even connect the frame rails together with a wire if the ground is on the opposite side from the engine block ground) ". HUH? If it's so great, IT NEEDS BAND-AIDS? Now 'your' system has FIVE connections in it. Mine still has only ONE. Why ADD expense, clutter, complexity, AND POTENTIAL FOR FAILURE? I thought the goal is to REDUCE it?
DaveP said:Why? Aluminum is a better conductor than copper, and way better than steel. It's bolted to the engine with 6 bolts. There's no voltage drop between the trans and the engine. And it's 4-5 feet closer.