Another issue to consider: older airplanes with generators will have very little juice available at idle, even high idle, if any at all. I can recall very distinctly many night approaches and landings in the old Skylane, which I think had a 35 amp generator, which resulted in the lights dimming just before landing and the radios blinking off line shortly thereafter, unless I shed some power-eaters right after touchdown. I got in the habit of shutting off the landing light immediately and the #2 navcom, DME, transponder, and strobes next, so that I'd have enough juice to be able to communicate on #1 and see the runway with the taxi light, especially if I had a long taxi to parking.
Conversely, with my current airplane, old but with the 60 amp alternator conversion, I can leave everything on (including the pitot heat if I wanted to) and it's still charging at normal taxi speeds, i.e., 1200 rpm or so. When my IA suggested the conversion at the time the engine was being built, I jumped at it--well worth it.
There's a big weight difference between any generator and an alternator, but the difference between a high output alternator and a low output alternator is pretty small, maybe a couple or three pounds. To my way of thinking, FWIW, if the nut behind the yoke/stick lost 5 pounds and kept the high output alternator, that'd be a better decision.
Cary