jpelc
Member
- 40
- 27
- 18
- Location
- Madison, Wisconsin
***** WARNING *****
This could and can happen to any of you!
My alternator caught on fire due to a very rare failure that in my 50 years of working on cars and trucks I never experienced.
Note, the electrical starter/alternator setup (circuitry) of the M1078-A0 is no different then any other vehicle out there since the beginning of times. There is a question (at the end) that I have no answer to....
I dropped my truck (Yeti) at a shop to fit it with a custom camper box at TRAX in Kentucky.
Just before Christmas, the guys went to check the truck that is starts ok and ready to drive it into the shop for box fitment.
Here are the order of events that ended up with fire:
Engine started
Starter solenoid fused in RUN position (as was confirmed after taking it off)
Engine ignition turned off (fuel off) to stop the engine....
Starter kept turning the engine full speed powered by batteries
TRAX staff turned the batteries disconnect to OFF
Engine kept turning by starter, powered by ALTERNATOR already producing 24V (aka perpetual motion, but really)
Alternator burned out due to over amperage, internally exploded and caught on fire
Alternator quit producing, starter stopped.
Thanks for the quick response by the TRAX staff, the fire was put out w/o any external damage to the truck!
Thank you TRAX!!!!
This sounds like a perpetual motion, if it was not for the alternator to "bail out".
Question: can this happen to any vehicle out there? The reason it happened here is that the alternator started producing 24V when the engine actually started and got up to the needed RPMs, but when turned off, the RPM should have dopped, yet the alternator kept producing until it literally and electrically burned itself out.

My repair and remedy:
I was already planning on turning the alternator to simple 24V, so thanks to a RONMAR post, I am converting the bracket to take an off the shelf basic 24V, 110A, $165 from Amazon alternator. Adding 24-12 converter to produce the 12V and adding a least expensive 12V battery to supply 12V when engine is not running. (the 12V battery is my choice to simplify the conversion and provide 12V for all the cab systems when at rest). Note: when dropping the 12V pickup from in between the 24V twin batteries setup, the PDC will not function since some of the initiating relays are powered by 12V. RONMAR has a great post on how to deal with that, but I choose to leave things as they are for now and add the converter with a separate battery.
The remedy: simple. I will install a battery disconnect between the +24V and the alternator/cab cable. So in case this ever re-occurs, I will disconnect the alternator first, then the batteries. This will stop the failed solenoid starter without any further damage (AND NO FIRE).
This could and can happen to any of you!
My alternator caught on fire due to a very rare failure that in my 50 years of working on cars and trucks I never experienced.
Note, the electrical starter/alternator setup (circuitry) of the M1078-A0 is no different then any other vehicle out there since the beginning of times. There is a question (at the end) that I have no answer to....
I dropped my truck (Yeti) at a shop to fit it with a custom camper box at TRAX in Kentucky.
Just before Christmas, the guys went to check the truck that is starts ok and ready to drive it into the shop for box fitment.
Here are the order of events that ended up with fire:
Engine started
Starter solenoid fused in RUN position (as was confirmed after taking it off)
Engine ignition turned off (fuel off) to stop the engine....
Starter kept turning the engine full speed powered by batteries
TRAX staff turned the batteries disconnect to OFF
Engine kept turning by starter, powered by ALTERNATOR already producing 24V (aka perpetual motion, but really)
Alternator burned out due to over amperage, internally exploded and caught on fire
Alternator quit producing, starter stopped.
Thanks for the quick response by the TRAX staff, the fire was put out w/o any external damage to the truck!
Thank you TRAX!!!!
This sounds like a perpetual motion, if it was not for the alternator to "bail out".
Question: can this happen to any vehicle out there? The reason it happened here is that the alternator started producing 24V when the engine actually started and got up to the needed RPMs, but when turned off, the RPM should have dopped, yet the alternator kept producing until it literally and electrically burned itself out.

My repair and remedy:
I was already planning on turning the alternator to simple 24V, so thanks to a RONMAR post, I am converting the bracket to take an off the shelf basic 24V, 110A, $165 from Amazon alternator. Adding 24-12 converter to produce the 12V and adding a least expensive 12V battery to supply 12V when engine is not running. (the 12V battery is my choice to simplify the conversion and provide 12V for all the cab systems when at rest). Note: when dropping the 12V pickup from in between the 24V twin batteries setup, the PDC will not function since some of the initiating relays are powered by 12V. RONMAR has a great post on how to deal with that, but I choose to leave things as they are for now and add the converter with a separate battery.
The remedy: simple. I will install a battery disconnect between the +24V and the alternator/cab cable. So in case this ever re-occurs, I will disconnect the alternator first, then the batteries. This will stop the failed solenoid starter without any further damage (AND NO FIRE).

