I found my answer... The 6 cylinder in 1986 did not have that extra charge wire, but the v8 did have that extra charge wire. Here are the 2 different schematics. I was looking at the 6 cylinder schematic.
81-87 v8 engine schematic
81-87 l6 engine schematic
Things I'll never know... Why someone at some point decided to remove the charge wire that used to go to the battery on mine. Glad I solved part of the mystery.
The engineers are smart and stuff and knew what was needed to be added or deleted for each application, which is why there are variations from truck to truck and year to year.
From years and years of experience I know how things should be, that's how I knew there was an issue on my truck. I tried to find the schematic for this, and being new to this site I didn't know they were all right here, which is where I found the ones I just posted. In my original search I only found the l6 schematic (with no charge wire to the battery) and a later model schematic. You keep saying this about engineers in 1986 but I'm not sure what your point is; are you saying everyone should leave these trucks alone? Making this statement (over and over) doesn't help at all because regardless of what experience or degree an engineer at GM had back in 1986, there are better ways to do things in 2024. For example, adding relays to remove the amps from the switches on the power windows... "Engineers are smart" and all, but it's absolutely better to pull the amps from the switches in our trucks and instead just use the power window switch to trigger a relay.
And after I've added an amplifier, KC lights, air horns, halogen bulbs, a better ignition, etc... I would be threading the needle on the 10 gauge charge wire my truck should've had (but didn't) anyway, so regardless of what the engineer gods thought back in 1986, adding an 8 gauge charge wire is a better solution.