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Your alternator keeps the battery charged and powers every electrical system while the engine runs — from ignition to HVAC to infotainment. Most alternators last 80,000–150,000 miles, but heat, belt tension, and duty cycle (think tow vehicles or cars with heavy audio installs) can shorten that. When one fails, you're not just looking at a new alternator: voltage regulators, brush sets, rectifier sets, and decoupler pulleys are common failure points that can be rebuilt or replaced independently, often for a fraction of a full unit swap. When buying, confirm your vehicle's amperage output — a stock 120A alternator won't cut it if you've added electrical loads — and check whether OEM fitment requires a specific plug style or cooling hose port. Remanufactured units from reputable brands are a solid value; new OEM-spec alternators cost more but are worth it on higher-mileage vehicles where the core is already worn.
Signs you need replacement
- Battery warning light on the dashboard. This is the most direct signal — your charging system isn't maintaining the 13.5–14.8V your battery needs. Don't assume it's the battery until you've tested alternator output.
- Dimming headlights or flickering interior lights at idle. When voltage drops under electrical load, lights are the first thing to show it — especially noticeable when you switch on the AC or blower motor.
- Whining, grinding, or squealing from the front of the engine. A worn alternator bearing produces a high-pitched whine that changes with RPM. A failing decoupler pulley can produce a rattle or chirp that mimics a belt issue.
- Electrical accessories behaving erratically. Power windows moving slowly, infotainment rebooting, or seat heaters cutting out under load all point to inconsistent voltage output from a weakening alternator.
- Dead or repeatedly drained battery. If your battery tests good but keeps going flat overnight, the alternator isn't recharging it — or a faulty diode is causing a parasitic draw even with the ignition off.
- Burning rubber or electrical smell from the engine bay. An overloaded alternator or slipping belt generates heat — a burning smell at operating temperature warrants immediate inspection before a full failure strands you.
Frequently asked questions
- How do I know which amperage alternator my vehicle needs? Match the OEM amperage rating first — it's stamped on the unit or listed in your factory service manual. If you've added aftermarket accessories like a winch, upgraded audio, or auxiliary lighting, size up accordingly. A higher-amp alternator from the same vehicle platform (a truck trim with a towing package, for example) will often bolt directly in.
- Is a remanufactured alternator as reliable as a new one? Quality varies significantly by brand. Reputable reman units replace brushes, bearings, rectifiers, and voltage regulators — the parts that actually fail — and carry warranties comparable to new units. Budget remans from discount stores often skip internal components. For most passenger cars, a quality reman is the best value; for commercial or high-load applications, a new unit makes more sense.
- What else should I replace when swapping an alternator? Always inspect the serpentine belt — if it's near its service interval (typically 60,000–100,000 miles), replace it while you have everything apart. Check the decoupler pulley for play or freewheel failure, and test the battery: an alternator that's been undercharging for weeks may have degraded it. New mounting hardware and a fresh connector pigtail are cheap insurance against callbacks.















































