It's a 'can' vs. 'should' situation, Derek.....
A battery 'can' take a HUGE amount of amperage, especially if it is deeply discharged. On another thread I posted an account from my 'battery boy' days of charging a large set of batteries (total of 360 gallons of electrolyte) with 800 amps at 48vdc. We didn't do that for long, even though the capacity of the bank was 3300 amp/hours and we were within the 25% window, because we could see them gassing and feel the heat rising.What current a battery 'should' take while charging is dependent on a lot of factors, and alternator capacity is not one of them. If you hooked up a second alternator, enabling you to pump 200 amps to your bank, would that be better?

It is also a mistake to assume that just because an amp-meter in line with the alternator output reads a certain figure - say 90 amps - that all 90 of those amps are being stored in the battery. So if you're intent on pumping current into your batteries, you should at least consider the pros and cons of fast charging, and decide on the safest, most efficient rate.Excessive current during charging causes several problems, which must be either dealt with or at least kept in mind:1. Overheating - Batteries always heat up during the charging process, and that is mostly wasted amps. The faster you try to charge your batteries, the more amps you will waste generating heat. Does your regulator have a temperature sensor attached to EACH bank? 2. Gassing - except during equalizing or top-off - is also a waste of amps. Hydrogen gas is explosive, and many boats lack an isolated battery space, so it is critical to be aware of when/if your batteries are gassing.3. Stress on the battery - every charge/discharge cycle eats into the total lifetime of the battery. Charging rate effects battery life, just as the rate/depth of the discharge does.4. Stress on the wiring/connections - you're pumping up to 110 amps out of your alternator; what size wire are you running? Is it 1 AWG or larger? All the way to both battery banks? How good are the connections? Now, having delivered my lecture

let me say that nothing in what I just wrote is intended to criticize you or tell you how fast you should or shouldn't charge your batteries - I'm only pointing out the factors involved, and that based on these, 'Capacity/8' is a generally accepted 'rule-of-thumb'.Cheers,Bobs/v X SAIL R 8