if you are only drawing 24v out of it, it would be no more overloaded than any other 24v alt. The Neihoff‘s Achilles heel rears its ugly head when you start pulling 14v out of it. The alt is rated 100A combined load, and since the 14 is pulled from the first half of the windings, it can only deliver ~60A max at 12v. An incandescent light load is ~25A, if you have the lights on and are pulling that, the alt can only deliver ~75A @24. The truck needs perhaps 15+ of that, you are now at 60 or less available. A 240A wet cell needs that if its discharged, and if they are really flat we are talking hours at max load to recharge.
At straight 24, you have 100A. Well thats 12.5 A for the lights, another 15 for the truck loads, that leaves you 70A. The batts are looking for 60A(25% AH), so <90% load. A much more favorable situation if you have several hours of charging ahead. Not an issue if you keep the batteries topped(float charger or run a lot of hours)
Of course AGM batts blow this situation up with their 45% of AH current draw(108A for a 240AH bank). Thats was probably a big factor in the 260A alt changeup.
now pick a vehicle, any vehicle. The daily in your driveway perhaps. Total loads, total battery demand(25 or45% of batt AH capacity based on batt type) and compare it against the alternator rating. I would be surprised if you find a worst case combination much above 50-60% of the alternators rating, and the batts will most likely NOT require hours to recharge.
As for loads like the AIH, still not thinking this is terrible. Again only fairly brief periods, and surely not as bad as say a winch
Their voltage drawdown when on basically cuts off feed to the battery. The alt and batt are a team, so as the alt goes to full output and voltage drops, the battery steps in and makes up the rest, then the alt replaces it when the AIH cuts off. if your batts are kept up, not much of an issue IMO, and not thinking it is an alt killer. Lots of vehicles use them…