The regulator is part of the engine computer.
The voltage regulator is NOT built in the alternator, it is part of the ECM, that is the Engine Control Module. The module (computer) monitors the charging system and signals the alternator how much voltage to send it to keep the system working properly. the voltage regulator is built in to the alternator
The engine computer is the voltage regulator, and yes you can replace it.
Most are located inside the rear section of the alternator Dodge usually mounted the regulator in the center of the firewall, until the trucks were fuel injected then the computer took over the job of voltage regulator.
Inside the evaporator case.
Age, overuse, bad voltage from the battery
can the voltage regulator be reset without replacing the engine computor
The voltage regulator is not in the alternator. The engine computer is the voltage regulator on a 1996 Dodge Dakota.
The engine computer is the voltage regulator.
The engine computer is the voltage regulator.
The engine computer is the voltage regulator.
The engine computer is the regulator.
No, the engine computer is the voltage regulator.
Yes
The voltage regulator is NOT built in the alternator, it is part of the ECM, that is the Engine Control Module. The module (computer) monitors the charging system and signals the alternator how much voltage to send it to keep the system working properly. the voltage regulator is built in to the alternator
No. The engine's control module regulates the voltage. No other regulator is necessary. A very expensive repair if it's faulty though.
Yes , the PCM is the voltage regulator.
the voltage regulator is built into the engine computer