Kris: I'm only saying this because after 33 years of working on ships generators, switchboards etc.. There may be some terminology differences between what we say. But this I know. Two alternators genertors or what ever do not need to putting out the exact voltage or one will be doing all the work. The unit with the higher voltage will be taking more of the load proportional to the difference in voltage between the two. Until it becomes to a point that the difference between the properly functioning unit and the one putting out less then the properly functioning one does take all the load and after that begins to motor the other one. Sorry I don't have the exact voltage where this would happen. This is what I do for a living. There is no way in Hadies that this could ever be true. Other wise ever since the invention of a twin engine aircraft with each engine having a generator or alternator or when ever they put two generators or alternators on a single engine that the voltages could be exactly the same for the life of the units. Otherwise 90 percent of these situations would be only working on one generator or alternator. There are tolerances that change. There are degrees of magnetism that change. This stuff is not is not that critical that it needs to be exact voltages or one will do all the work. When paralleling different KW generators this is one of the ways in which we are able to have two different size generators share a load. Excite one more or less than the other that way it will be either a few volts higher or lower hence one will take more or less than the other. Or you run one engine at tad slower that the other. Voltage is a product of 2 things excitation and speed.
Yes it is dumb to have one voltage regulator for 2 alternators or generators. Would love to know the FAA inspector that approved that install.
John