I'm going to go out on a limb here but I want to know why? I was often asked to do this as well on old farm tractors and I could never understand why. For the most part most generators will run 30 or 40 years without trouble other than the odd regulator and an occasional set of brushes. They have no trouble keeping the battery up or grandma would never have driven the car. I can absolutely positively, beyond any shadow of doubt guarantee that no alternbator will ever be that reliable. It's only advantage is that it will produce more output at slower speeds. The only other advantage I can think of is it will not come apart at speeds over 7000 RPM but I doubt that's the problem we are trying to solve. If you want to go ahead it is a simple matter to get a matching alt and regulator and wire them up. Bat still goes to the battery terminal.Regulator is fed from switched 12 volt supply and goes to the field terminal of the alternator. That is for the single field wire alternator. The Double field wire alternator is a bit different but only minor as it feeds the field directly (switched 12 volt) and then returns the field to the regulator through the second terminal to control the ground side of the circuit. The regulator must be fed power from the switched 12 volt as well as it is transistorized. The regulators for both must be grounded to the body/chassis. A Motor Manual or a Chiltons manual from the late 60's or early seventies will have an excellant diagram in the General Service section (Back Half of the book). The old charging system wiring and regulator can be dipensed with. Don Scott Monfort wrote: > > Forwardlookers, > I'm wanting to convert two cars over to an alternator from a generator, > 12 volt system. If anyone has any pointers or advise I'd greatly appreciate > it. If it makes any difference, one is a '58 Plymouth, the other a '60 > Plymouth. > > Thanks in advance,
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