I'm wondering if someone can verify my alternator/regulator wiring for me. The alternator is a delco reman 10DN 55 amp..correct for external regulator. Regulator is D635 Regitar USA unit which I think is a solid state unit with a non removable cover. It has 4 connections and a spade on the back for the condenser/capacitor. Question is should my alt have 2 wires coming from the r/f terminal? ie the dark blue field wire is present but no second wire.?? Some drawings I've looked at show a white wire from R on the alt to 2 on the regulator. My regulator is wired; F to alt (field to Field,dark blu) , 2 is jumped to power on the horn relay , 3 is small brn to firewall junction , and 4 is hooked to the condensor..the black wire has been cut and spliced to the red condenser wire. I unwrapped the wires from the regulator to the alt to see if there was a cut off wire hiding in there but nope. I thought the condenser should be pugged into the spade on the back of the regulator....Reg terminal 3 should be juice from horn relay?? Something doesn't seem right here. I want to keep this stock so I won't be upgrading the alt set up at this point. I have read some posts talking about 3 terminal regulators because of our ammeters? This regulator was in the car when I got itand it is not an original unit.. Having said all that my car indicates correct charging at the battery and voltage drop is ok...The ammeter works but only indicates a discharge condition. Can anyone help me out verifying this?? Thanks in advance
63 Parisienne sport coupe (The Big GTO), black, maroon interior, 409 4 speed; former owner of a 59 El Camino, 63 Corvette SWC, 62 Chev Bel Air SC. 1963- Pontiac top selling car in Canada
Mahone Bay, NS Still not old enough to need an automatic
Wow! I can't believe you took pics of that! Amazing. Pic one seems to confirm no white wire to alt. Pic 2 shows what I think is correct at terminal 3 and I see that the brown wire is at terminal 2 going to the fire wall..I rewired mine to correspond to Impala pics I've seen and tried it. No smoke came out lol. I note now that instead of getting a charge at idle it only begins charging at a higher rpm...say 1500 which I think was normal. Also interesting that your pic shows the 4 terminal reg....I've never seen a three terminalregulator of this design/era. Thanks
I have read some posts supporting ammeter vs bulb differences....this makes sense to me. I wonder if the U.S. models (pontiacs) were the same?? Any ideas about which regulator for an ammeter??
I likely still have that one somewhere, I took a pic because I knew the external regulator and the alternator were fairly unique.
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63 Parisienne sport coupe (The Big GTO), black, maroon interior, 409 4 speed; former owner of a 59 El Camino, 63 Corvette SWC, 62 Chev Bel Air SC. 1963- Pontiac top selling car in Canada
Mahone Bay, NS Still not old enough to need an automatic
The R terminal is only used with an idiot light. The R is the relay terminal that controls the lamp relay inside the voltage regulator using terminal 2. With an amp meter the relay isnt needed and on an original regulator there wouldnt be a terminal 2 because it wouldnt have a lamp relay. An aftermarket electronic regulator will have the 2 terminal, but you wouldnt have anything hooked to it. Hope this helps.
Paul
I've ordered up a delco equivilant 3 terminal ammeter application voltage regulator#633.....HOLY what a mouth full! Rock Auto is sending me this as we speak...I have the 635 regulator in place and working. I'll report on the results if they're are any!
An update....I installed the three terminal voltage regulator I bought.It is/was listed for 63 american pontiac applications. I hooked the capacitor to the rear terminal,F to F, red to 3 and small brown to 4.. Next morning I find my alt very warm along with the regulator(not quite so warm).Brand new battery sucked down to 11V..I figured out that this regulator does not want 12v to # 3 terminal so I removed that.Now with only two wires connected things seem better.The amp gauge shows charge as it should and the alt is charging nicely..but..the fuel gauge appears to not like it so much.Brand new sender and anally cleaned ground there lol. Through all of this I've also discovered a wrong coil installed. Internally resisted. I wondered because the car would die when warm on test drives ...so..brand new distibutor complete assly,new coil,new plug wires and new engine harness. Now, the harness in the stock 63 impala configuration comes minus the main (black) hot lead from starter to ign sw. ugh. Yes U.S. pontiacs are different. So I'm in the process of removing that wire from the old harness and putting it in the new one! The new harness is very well done...American Autowire CF40205. I think the previous owner miswired the regulator a wrecked it because I reinstalled it wired correctly this time just to see and no worky worky. I am now going to buy a new 635 version and plug that in as I do not think the 3 terminal is/was correct for these Canadian cars! I'm sure some of you will get a chuckle out of my foibles. Maybe it can help someone else. No I'm not wealthy but I want this car stock and working as it should so I don't have to worry and my sometimes lenght cruises
You can have my old regulator if you want it, I think I still have it and the alternator too.
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63 Parisienne sport coupe (The Big GTO), black, maroon interior, 409 4 speed; former owner of a 59 El Camino, 63 Corvette SWC, 62 Chev Bel Air SC. 1963- Pontiac top selling car in Canada
Mahone Bay, NS Still not old enough to need an automatic
I know this post is old but Id like to share this here for others that may be looking for stock regulator info. Basically there were/are three different voltage regs for the GM cars that had externally regulated alternators ( not generators) . One is a dual coil 4 terminal unit for use with a charge light...1119506 or D635. Next there is a dual coil 4 terminal that is used if you have an ammeter instead of a light...1119507 or D632. Now this regulator can also be wired differently and run with a charge light but requires an additional relay which some cars did come with..Olds and buicks I think. I believe this regulator is the one my 63 came with and the one Don kindly posted a picture of above. Finally there is a single coil, 3 terminal one, 1119511 or D633 that also works with an ammeter. I think these were used on the American Pontiacs . Only two wires are used with this version. Solid state versions of these are out there.All three look externally the same but are all wired up differently so you cannot just buy the regulator pig tail that is all over the web and wire it in according to color...It will only work that way for the D635 model which was used on the Chevies of the period....Canadian Ponchos are stand alone here as I'm sure we all know. My car came to me with an internally resisted coil and a solid state D635 regulator..WRONGO.Stock setups need an externally resisted coil as there is a resistor wire in the harness and on of the two regulators for ammeters mentioned above. Also as stated by Paul above there is no wire from the R terminal on the alternator as that's a trigger used with a charge light.I tried both ammeter regulators and they both work fine provided they are wired up correctly. I bought an NOS Delco Remy D632 off the web and that is what is in my car now as I believe these are what our Canadian early sixties cars came out with. If anyone wants the wiring configs just PM me! Cheers