The truth is over time all the words have been used indiscriminately and truly without any reference to any real meaning they may have.
Bullsh!t
In the grid connect, building based AC electrical trades, generators, alternators, magnetos, dynamo's......who cares because the vast majority of workers never actually work on any of them.......they simply connect the wires to the supply provided.
Thus no distinction is made in the trade.
Bullsh!t. In fact you would not pass an electrical trades if you did not know the difference between them.
That is easy for someone not in the trade to say about the trade.
As far as dynamo's being DC.....in my youth anybody who had a pushbike with lights on it had a thing that had "dynamo" printed large upon it.....truth to tell many of them produced true AC..(it had no comutator, that was simpler and cheaper)..the one on my bike certainly did...i think I still have it somewhere...
But they are an alternator. Just because it has dynamo written on it doesn't mean that's what it is.
Using that logic a Ford Mustang is a horse.
An AC Cobra is a snake. A Pride Panther is a cat
So incorrect and non specific use of all the words is very very common.
Because of all the misinformation given out willy nilly by those trying to bullsh!t.
You talk specifics. So do I.
BUT..if you go to anybody in the auto trades (the DC world) and say "generator" that means something very specific and that is a device that produces DC in a particular way and is not found on modern cars, likewise if you say the word "alternator" the vision of something very specific comes to mind and with that comes expectations of performance.
What your talking about is indeed a dynamo but it was dumbed down to generator as a very generalised term for mainly clients of those trades who had to fix them or work on them.
A dynamo is still a generator. So is an alternator and so is a dynamo.
I know who call the car's alternator the generator. Still right but not specific.
Google it. Definition of a dynamo. DC output.
Modern cars have an alternator because they're an alternator. They give out an AC waveform which is then turned into DC via the rectifier.
Likewise the word "magneto" refeers to something in a particular form and it is specific to small engines, a coil usually mounted under or behind the flywheel and acted on by permanent magnets, usually mounted on the flywheel.
That produces a spark to make the spark plug spark.
Go to Crowley Marine site and show me one mention of the word magneto.
Coils is the norm. Maybe there's a reason for that??
http://www.crowleymarine.com/
Regardless of it being configured for ignition, charging or lighting purposes, the appearance, physical form and principle of operation remains the same...they are all magnetos by convention in that industry.
Bullsh!t.
A huge difference in them. Find me one reference to a well known parts manual where a lighting coil is called a magneto.
As far as going to a parts suppler and asking for a coil that fits under the flywheel of an outboard.....they will probably not use the word "magneto" at all in the parts listing.
I wonder why?? Because they're not magneto's
It will almost certainly say "charging coil" or "ignition coil" and in many cases particularly where there is a modern ignition it will be one and the same coil and part of the same assembly.
Show me one part where a lighting or charge coil is built into the ignition coil.
You don't get too many true magneto's at all on outboards since the 1950-60's. Generally there is a coil which generates enough Ummff to enable the ignition coil to make a spark happen at the spark plug.
My point being that people very commonly expect "alternator" type performance and behaviour like in their car from the chaging system in their outboard, and thus fail to understand many things.
My point is people talk bullsh!t.
What should I call the 800w alternator sitting under the bench and what should I call the 50MVA alternators I worked on during my stint with a supply and generation authority?
One is a small output as compared to the other just like the output of a boat alternator is less then the output of an alternator in a car (usually).
Amount of output has no bearing on what something is called in this line of argument.
Terms are specific.
Google the terms generator, alternator, dynamo and magneto
Generalisations are not specific and misleading.
cheers