jasondrobbins
New Member
I am curious about what everyone’s opinion is about converting to a 1 wire internally regulated alternator vs an oem setup. Starting a build. I need help.
Middle of nowhere and you need an alternator. Good luck finding a non OEM part.
Middle of nowhere and you need an alternator. Good luck finding a non OEM part.
I have no trouble
I have no trouble getting stock parts locally in northern Colorado
Lucky! I just plan ahead now and I can get most things through Amazon in a day. If I order in the am I can get Summit items from the TX warehouse.
I needed an alternator for my 1972 Duster. It was Saturday at 6 pm. I live in a rural town and my local Advance Auto is open on Sunday. I called them that Saturday night and they had the regulator in stock local for like $25 and could get me the $88 OE style 2 groove Car Quest alternator by 9 am the next morning from one of their nearby stores, on a Sunday…
It’s very possible. The whole issue is just that thought process though… No one can outthink what will or wont be stocked. About 5 years ago I was helping a friend with his 2000 Wrangler 4 cylinder and we wanted to replace injectors that evening… I had to hit up auto parts stores in 3 counties to find 4 injectors that afternoon/evening. I was literally chasing these by asking each store if any other branches had them in stock and going there. But each store only stocked 1 injector… if at all, and a 2000 Wrangler to me is common. So you just never know what will be commonly stocked for what at any time….i gotta wonder if they would stock a 1994 i think it was toyota 4 runner alt. places by me have those on the shelf....
Keep the alternator OE style. Here is my argument. I needed an alternator for my 1972 Duster. It was Saturday at 6 pm. I live in a rural town and my local Advance Auto is open on Sunday. I called them that Saturday night and they had the regulator in stock local for like $25 and could get me the $88 OE style 2 groove Car Quest alternator by 9 am the next morning from one of their nearby stores, on a Sunday… Last I checked I can’t get one faster than that ordered on a Saturday to have on Sunday before noon in a rural town in WV. All in including just eating the $10 core charge I was less than $130 for new alternator (60 amp) and regulator, and they bolted right in, no adapting. Every other alternator requires adapting and is generally more expensive initially.
I do agree with Summit and Amazon usually have parts in 24-48 hours and have gone that route too, and Rock Auto is usually about 2 to 3 days to get here but still a great choice. However all require shipping, which is a cost, and if it’s wrong you can’t just refuse it on the spot. So all of these are excellent options, but the key is you have to have OE style part for something to get it that quick, so why fight Ma Mopar on this one? Do you really want to stand there and try to remember what other car your alternator is from because it’s not a failure that comes up very often once you install it and you can’t buy any auto part without “what is this for?” because there are few parts guys any more, just enter make and model and hope it’s there, and not all cross references are in the computer…
May 2022So how old is that story? Because if it’s more than a couple years old it’s meaningless.
May 2022
Your not going backwards...But anyway, I forget some have fallen in love with electronically controlled cars and accessories. I am going backwards because it’s too complex in many ways, especially a road side repair