Another divergence but an important question in my mind. Steve D said:
"5. Overcurrent protection is not required at an alternator if the ampacity of the conductor is equal to or greater than the rated output of the alternator."
My alternator feed is fused at the battery. The alternators are rated at 100 amps. How large should the fuse be? Can the fuse be eliminated if the ampacity of the wire is large enough. I am interpreting this provsion as so.
There is more to that...
"Overcurrent protection is not required in conductors from self-limiting alternators with integral regulators if the conductor is less than 40 in (102 cm), is connected to a source of power other than the battery, and is contained throughout its entire distance in a sheath or enclosure."
So, in your case, you need a fuse at the alternator because the conductor is, I assume, over 40". Remember, the fuse protects the wire, not the device, so you can make it as large as the wire's maximum ampacity, or at least safely above the alternator's output to prevent it from tripping inadvertently, which would likely damage the alternator. Note: many alternators will briefly put out more than their max rating when cold.
I helped to amend the standard to include this provision, essentially it says that stock alternators wired to the starter post don't need OCP (some manufacturers like CAT still include it) because the output is part of a factory harness which is chafe protected and relatively short. Once you add external regulation, and a longer output wire, that all changes.