You need to understand how the light works. When the key is on but the engine is not running, the bulb gets its ground through the alternator's internal regulator and illuminates. As soon as the engine starts and the alternator has output, now the bulb has 12 volts + on both its terminals and their is no current path and the bulb is off. There is no current flow unless you turn the key on with the engine off.
Think of the DELCO alternators on vehicles with an ammeter and no light. A Corvette being one example. It is not running down the battery when not running and turns on with no problem.
If we talk about cars or light trucks, there are many small current drawing circuits on all the time. Clock in the radio, engine computer to respond to a remote start, door unlock fob.
The battery can withstand a parasitic draw for months.
Some people feel the remote voltage sensing is a critical function. It becomes appropriate when there is a large constant current draw in the vehicle, air conditioning, electric rear window etc.
If the wire from the alternator to the battery and the battery to the main fuse block is carrying a lot of current all the time, there will be voltage drops occurring in the wire which the alternator cannot see unless it has a dedicated voltage signal i.e. remote sensing.
On many tractors, motorcycles, garden tractors, battery charging is done by a dynamo not an alternator. The dynamo, using permanent magnets (PM) instead of a controllable magnetic field, puts out an alternating current at around 40 volts AC. Not unlike a regular alternator. With the dynamo, the AC output goes to an external not internal rectifier. The rectifier incorporates a Zener diode. If you are not familiar with Zener Diodes, they are designed to turn on at a design voltage and in doing so turns any voltage in excess of a set level into heat. It is completely dumb. There is no remote voltage sensing.
The fins on this rectifier are to dispose of the excess heat.
Note the circled Zener diode in the internal circuitry.
With the voltage display sensors I suggest owners use, they draw so little current they have no effect on the battery for weeks if not more. You can wire them to be on all the time or, as some owners do, have them supplied by the key switch when it is in the ON position so it serves as a reminder the key was left on.
Few owners can successfully diagnose and fix complicated charging systems. The most modern complicated ones use a computer bus to control the alternator. This system is beyond all but a few trained individual's understanding.
The One wire Denso and voltage indicator are a system most owner's can successfully get working.
Dave
M7040