Tranona
Well-Known Member
Some are
Anyway, there are no longer any engines being designed for yacht use (Bukh are the only dedicated small marine diesels I can think of, but the intended application is ships' lifeboats). My Volvo was designed for generators and refrigeration plant, I believe, neither of which need an alternator hung off the side.
They are all adaptations, even when brand new out of the factory, and a belt is a much easier adaptation than some kind of gear-train to the crankshaft.
Pete
Lots of variations in the way pumps (and alternators) are driven. Volvo raw water pumps are gear driven , but freshwater pumps by belt. Alternators are belt driven almost universally to give the flexibility of different sizes, types etc on the range of applications of the base engine.
With motorcycle engines as mentioned earlier, they are single application engines and packaging to achieve compactness makes integrated gear driven alternators a good solution.