Re: Estimating alternator capacity
Reply #1 –
Yes but... This applies to school buses that have a pretty fixed service cycle and does not differentiate between intermittent loads - wheel chair lift and warning lights for example - and continuous loads such as headlights. It may apply to a motor-home that has heavy charging loads when traveling IE charging house batteries from the alternator. Each application is different and each duty cycle is too. Take a semi running over the road. Once the starter draw is made up the total demand on the alternator is quite small especially in the daytime if no lights are in use. At the other end an ambulance or fire appliance may sit with the engine at idle or with the fast idle engaged with a lot of lights and systems running for an extended period. In this case an alternator with a high output at low engine revs is required. In this case it must supply all the demand without calling for make-up from the battery. Each case is different so you must run your own calculations per the video to size your charging system.
There is a little more to this but the video is a good start.
Keith