When ignition is on 12v from ignition goes through the bulb to the alternator through a coil to magnetise and excite the alternator once engine starts and alternator is generating there is the same voltage at each end of the bulb and light goes out. Old alternator may not have been getting the 12V via bulb. An earth some where between bulb and alternator would also give similiar symptons.
Okay - ran these tests last night. Please see if you can help me interpret it all.
Engine off: turned the ignition switch on and ignition light came on - as usual. I then removed the small outermost wire from the alternator and the ignition light stayed on! Hmmmm. I hooked up my red wire on the multimeter to the disconnected wire and grounded the black wire of the multimeter to the car body. No voltage, or something like .05 V.
With the small outermost wire from the alternator still disconnected, I then started the engine. It started right up. I then hooked up the red wire of multimeter to the small outermost terminal of the alternator, and the black wire of the multimeter to the car body ground. No voltage or about .05V
I'm thinking that if my ignition light is always on, perhaps like you suggested, it is grounded somewhere, getting it's power from the positive off the ignition switch, and being grounded it lights up.
Final test. With the engine running nicely, I took a multimeter reading off the battery. It was below 12V. Hmmmm, not good. I increased the idle, and still the same. Scary. A brand new alternator which does not seem to be charging. Maybe my old alternator was fine afterall!
Any thoughts on these things will be appreciated.
Thanks!
Mike