Jebiruph
Well-Known Member
For the alternator systems, it's the alternator that provides the power to the vehicle systems, not the battery. Alternator output is adjusted based on the load on the system, not just to charge the battery. If the battery needs additional charging, the output of the alternator is increased to provide additional power to charge the battery. When the battery is charged, the alternator output drops back down to just what is needed by the vehicle systems.The alternator (non e-Torque/4xe Jeeps) or inverter only charges the main battery as needed. AGM batteries can not be charged past the fully charged state with 14V or they will overheat/expand/blow
So on both types of vehicles there is circuitry to measure the state of charge of the battery and stop charging when voltage exceeds a threshold (typically 12.7 to 13V) and resume charging when it drops again.
I think what happens is that the system notices the batter is fully charged, takes the charging off-line, and the battery quickly collapses causing a momentary voltage drop till the charging system picks it up again.
(That is just my wild ass guess - but I am an electrical engineer for what its worth)
The etorque system should be operating the same way.
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