mickyd555 wrote:chimpboy wrote:I guess so, it seems to make sense if it is a 28V/70A alternator.
What brand is it?
not sure on brand, its a universal one for machinery?
One of the "L" terminals is actually coming off the regulator though, what do i do with that?
I would be guessing that that one is a lamp acting as an exciter, hence it needs to run to a lamp which then runs to the +24V side of your 24V battery set-up (switched to ignition, maybe with a relay). But it's a guess.
See the fact that it's universal might mean that there are some alternative ways of wiring it into different original systems. Maybe it has one L for one type of wiring and the other L for a different type. Or maybe it has dual outputs and the second L is to tell you there's a load on your second output.
Can you see if (say) N and E are separate or just one connection with two outputs? Anything like that?
I would personally probably take a punt on B -> +24V battery, N -> ground, and L -> a lamp, and cross my fingers, and leave the others unconnected. But this is risky so it's probably better not to do it

.
From a bit of googling, some other connectors that are common on 24V alternators, or marine/diesel alternators are "W" for a tacho output, AUX for an auxiliary battery output, IND or D+ for a signal terminal (basically the same as L I think?), F- for field control. There are even some with temp sensor outputs (usually for an external reg though). N and E are not common from what i can find.
Sorry, I wish I could help more.
BTW 24V/70A is a nice amount of power, you will be happy once you get it running.
This is not legal advice.