The application in the 1010 is different than most isolator/equalizers in that the 12 volt system is the A battery (12 volt ). The Sure Power converter Lavarock used works although I do not know how it works with 24 volt jump starting or if the output voltage is sufficient (14.2) to fully charge the A battery.
I know there are a multitude of issues with this system, the first being a wiring issue addressed by a Technical Bulletin rewire (TB 43-0001-39-
. The second is the durability of the connections as the Leece Neeville alternators have steel terminals which like to rust. Ditto with the Duvac and regulator.
I am trying to get mkcoen's M1010 alternator system running correctly. So far, it has been fried diodes, application of the TB rewire and terminal cleanings. It HAS been running sporadically, then crashes.
Definitely get the TB applied, then clean all connections and check for the burned out diodes, these are hanging in the wiring harness, a real kludge for sure. And the diodes are like hen's teeth, we replaced with general purpose 6 ampere diodes, nothing special here. The diode mentioned in the TB, NSN 6145-01-192-1643, can be substituted by an inline ATC bladed fuse holder and Radio Shack diode 276-1144. Crimp 1/4" short spade terminals on the diode just like a fuse. Use the wiring diagram in the -20 TM for orientation of the diode, this is critical. The cathode (banded end) goes to the A+ terminal of the Twinput, this is the sense line telling the Twinput the voltage of the A battery.
The filter assembly on the Duvac itself fried, this is a Zener Diode filter using 15 and 30 volt Zeners to ground. This isn't too critical, these only absorb the high frequency, high voltage harmonics which arise from the Duvac's silicon controlled rectifier's switching between 12 and 24 volt.