The way it is now:

Thanks.The only reason I'm concerned is that the 2 red wires butt spliced to the black wire are around 12 guage each(kind of small). I'm going to upgrade them each to 10 guage and solder the connections.spider2081 wrote:I believe the larger of the black wires 6m or 8 AWG connects the alternator output B+ or Bat terminal to the same terminal on the starter solenoid as the green battery lead connects. The alternator B+ terminal has 12volts on it as long as the battery is connected in the car. This wire diameter is large because a low battery will take all 65 amps the alternator is capable of putting out.
The smaller black wire 4m or #10 AWG connects the same alternator output B+ terminal to the feed side of fuses 9 and 10 and then on to the ignition switch, cigar lighter and parking light switch.
Hope this helps
The only wires connected to the alternator output is that one red wire coming off the black wire. This is why I'm not sure if everything is ok.spider2081 wrote:Is there a large wire like #6 or #8 connecting the alternator output to the starter solenoid terminal with the battery lead on it?? I think that is very important.
The red wires are probably something a previous owner did.
Yes I did put in new 1 gauge battery cable, more for performance and awhile ago i did the "brown wire fix". I used painless wiring brand 10 gauge for the alternator to starter wire. The PO had used 12 gauge wires to link the black wire to the alternator and starter.spider2081 wrote:My diagram for a 1980 shows a #8 wire connecting the alternator output to the starter post that the battery lead is connected to. I think a #10 is too small to carry the 55 amps the alternator is capable of putting out to charge a weak battery. The other #10 wire connecting the fuses and lights is the correct size.
I think I remember you replaced your battery cable to help with low voltage issues. The wire that connects the alternator to the battery cable is now the weakest link in the circuit. I would make sure it is at least a #8 wire. I installed a #6 on my 1981 Spider. The #8 was melted when I bought the car. The alternator diode was shorted and melted the insulation on the #8 wire when the battery discharged through the wire.