1)use a multimeter / voltmeter
2)there should be two thick red wires (8-10 gauge) on the post terminals on the passenger side (24v) gen. the post terminal with an extra red wire thats around a 12 gauge wire is the 24v post. the other red wire thats 8-10 gauge is the ground terminal / 12v terminal.
3)checking is very simple. turn the truck on, idle. take the hot/red probe and put on the (2 wire) post which should be the 24v post on passenger gen. then ground the other probe out on either metal or the primary ground post on the battery bank. if it reads 26v @ idle then your ride is still 12/24v. if it reads 14v then it may have been converted and / or there is a wiring issue somewhere if its reading something like 15,16,18 volts...
4) check 12v post on pass gen. just to be certian about wiring issues. it should read 14v @ idle. if the ground/12v post reads less than 12v then there is a major wiring issue somewhere, and the system is still 12/24.
to clarify again, because you can get a nice shock if you slip... always connect hot first, then ground second. especially when reading voltages and amps.
one post should read 26v @ idle, the other 14v @ idle. any other readings indicate an issue.
also, if it had been converted then the gound / 12v post on the passenger gen should be a ground and not recieving 14v from the driver side gen.
AND... on the passenger gen... the post with a large red wire (8-10 gauge wire) AND a smaller 12 gauge wire IS the 24v post. the post with just a singe large red (8-10 gauge) wire is the 12v post on the passenger side which recieves 12v from the driver side gen, or if its on the driver side, the same post serves as the ground.
by what ive read and by looking at piks it would seem to me the system is still 12/24 hybrid. keep it. far superior... and cheaper.