Umm, when you measured open circuit, you were measuring with the probes on the slip rings (copper rings on front of alternator) with the brushes disconnected or with business cards/plastic sheet inserted between the brushes and the rings, correct?
If your multimeter is no an autoranging type - be sure that you had it set on the LOWEST Ohms setting (usually 200 Ohm full scale) as the alternator is very low resistance (normally). On out of range display measurement might look to some people like an open circuit..
Thanks for the info. I did both actually - tried it with the brushes disconnected, and then with paper between the brushes and the slip rings. I figured it was the same but...well why not?
With the tester, I did it with both settings, which on mine is "Rx10" and "Rx1k" settings. It's an old analog one - I like those better than the digital.
Is there any trick to moving the brushes out of the way? I can't get a good hold on the spring loaded clips that hold them in, especially that one in the rear. The Haynes manual says "see illustration" and then they don't show much of anything in the illustration.
There is open circuit, closed circuit, short circuit. Basically a short circuit means the juice is not going where it should - electricity always takes the shortest route, so it's taking a shorter path. In fact, that's exactly what I did when I did the test by shorting the slip rings together and turning the key, and got the gen light to turn on, as a test.
Which one is this? Open I believe, a short would mean that the circuit is complete, and I don't believe it is.