94 plus 8, 3.9 Alternator failed last night on the way home from evening car meet. Lights on, driving steadily all going well. Ignition light came one, voltmeter dropped to 10v, lights go dim. Screeching from engine bay. Got home just about, alternator output showing just 10.2v. Bu99er!
How odd. From my Help Box and experience, fan belts fail
far more often than alternators...
not that Morgan Plus 8/LR alternators have ever been great. Owners do not change the belts regularly.

I carry one with me at all times under the seat.) Rubber ages whether used or not. Serpentine belts last longer. Older fan belts like yours are good for 2-3 years depending on usage.
A failing belt (whether cracked [tiny little lines only seen on close examination] broken or merely loose (the latter being VERY common) announces itself with loud screeching. If any of these are bad enough, the voltage drops and the car often starts overheating as the same belt drives the water pump. 90% of the time, tightening or belt dressing spray will keep you going for another year. You CAN get another type of screeching if the bearing has failed..but that most often occurs gradually. The car will keep going as long as it still has enough voltage to create ignition sparks.
Most people take the fan belt symptoms as a failed alternator. Rather than tightening the belt or changing it, OR going to a motor factor to test the alternator
in situ, they remove the alternator and send it off for repair or replace it. The former results in it,
1. They will not test before and merely rebuild it
2. They are smart, test first and then return it without or only a small charge
3. They are not honest and merely return it with charges after doing nothing.
I guesstimate universal results are evenly spread over all three.
The easy way to remove the alternator from your car is to remove the alternator
and the bracket that attaches it to the engine. 3 bolts..one accessible through the valence, through a specially made access hole (that you show) for that purpose.
l.