Two alternators ??

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Brooks James

VET, CPT, Huey Medevac Pilot
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I'm thinking about it
Outer groove on balancer
Pulley not need with new 16:1 manual box
Will line up with frigging

In keeping with aircraft style redundancy, standby, and overkill electrically
The square back is 80 amps the other 50 ?

PXL_20231213_170414640.jpg


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Just use a bigger amp battery for electrical power reserve.

Unless you are just trying to make it look cool.

☆☆☆☆☆
 
Just use a bigger amp battery for electrical power reserve.

Unless you are just trying to make it look cool.

☆☆☆☆☆
Yes, cool, and attempted engine symmetry
Fat stereo , electronics in the future
Don't want a heavy battery in the trunk
130 amps should do it
 
But why, unless your a stereo freak i don't see the point.
Why not run two engines incase the other breaks down?
twin ignition systems?
Front axle incase the rear goes out?
4 headlights?
16 fuel pumps? You never know
 
But why, unless your a stereo freak i don't see the point.
Why not run two engines incase the other breaks down?
twin ignition systems?
Front axle incase the rear goes out?
4 headlights?
16 fuel pumps? You never know
previously mentioned a fat stereo in the future post 4
 
There are readily available alternators from 100 all the way up to 200 amps that will just bolt on in place of the original. Not doubling the weight, not adding the drag from the extra belt, less additional wiring to scab in etc, etc…
 
My diesel box truck has dual alternators. But it has four batteries too. Two for the engine, two for the lift gate.
I have no idea how it's all wired, but I know that when one of the lift batteries went bad, it drained the other three.
 
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There are readily available alternators from 100 all the way up to 200 amps that will just bolt on in place of the original. Not doubling the weight, not adding the drag from the extra belt, less additional wiring to scab in etc, etc…
I had these already, thanks
 
As to redundancy,
in my experience,
Mopar alternators seldom have trouble; Just keep some spare brushes in the Glovebox.
If anything gives trouble on them it's the bearings; Just put new ones in every 15 years or so......... lol.
But regulators, now that's a nuther story.
 
Reminds me of my friends volare were working on. He has a spare ECU mounted on the fender next to the original and then another spare inside the car.
Never had a mopar alternator leave me on the side of the road. ECU, regulator and ballast always in the glovebox.
 
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