Sorry man, just got back from a very long weekend that can only be referred to as partying my ass off without the internet.
Steel, He's not a tard. just new to the game. And I was asking the wiring questions to try to see if that might be the problem, but if I'm reading his replies accurately, he has his amp wired correctly. If he had the amp wired bridged, he would have a 1 ohm load, But it isn't bridged, each channel is seeing its own 2ohm load which is perfectly in the amps specs.
I do however stand behind my saying that your amplifier is very inefficient. This is your dimming problem not your electical system, your not putting out that much power in this whole mess, but your amp is cheap and for lack of a better word - sucks. Numerous people have said that our alternators are good. and I agree, 135a is very high output for a factory alternator.
Dont waste your time with upgrading your alternator, I dont know anybody here who is running more than stock. Even if you do want to upgrade, have you looked into the royal PITA it is to replace the alternators on our cars? I dont know of any car that is worse to replace, and it will cost upwards of $350 labor plus the cost of the alternator to get it done if you don't have the tools/willpower/patience to do it yourself. If you want to keep your amp, then just upgrade the "big 3" wires.
Upgrading your battery is a better more expensive solution to the problem than a cap. But it does the same thing and is only a band-aid to mask the real problem, your cheap amplifier and fords factory wiring (the big 3).