I recently lost 2 modules and 1 pickup coil....
How do i test the voltage regulator?
Well, you don't exactly. If its letting the output of the alternator go above 14.5 volts, then you assume its bad or has a bad ground.
On most of these trucks, I think they are built into the alternator. Most of those are replaceable, but its easier to just replace the alternator.
If you have a voltmeter on the truck, get a good quality digital voltmeter from somewhere, and check the accuracy of the one on the dash.
Hook it to the battery wires, not the posts, or one leg to ground and the other to the output wire from the alt.
Run the truck at various RPMs, with different electrical loads switched on. Compare the voltage between the voltmeter and the dash unit.
If the dash unit is off, but by the same amount each time, just make the correction in your head for now.
If at any time you see more than 14.5 volts, you have a problem.
A couple of years back, I had the dash unit out of my truck for some work.
I had a precision variable power supply along with a good meter. I pulled the needle off the meter, put exactly 13 volts into the meter, and put the needle back on at that reading.
Then, checked it a different voltages, and it was dead on.
You really need either a scope or a meter with a maximum capture function for this one, but you might see it without it.
Run the engine at a good RPM, 1K or so. Watch the digital meter closely, and turn on a heavy load.
Fan on high is usually a good one. The voltage may dip and recover, or dip and not recover.
Either on is OK, but if it does not recover well, you may need a bigger alt.
Then, watch the voltage carefully and dump the load off quick. This is when a lazy regulator may let the voltage float too high for a brief time.
The battery will absorb some of the overvoltage, and it might not last long. But electronics can be damaged by brief spikes.
A bad battery can cause an overvoltage condition, but usually will not crank the engine afterward.
Also, if you have an AM radio, turn it on and tune it off a station. A faint high pitched whine, that usually is there even with the volume all the way down, is OK, a loud harsh whine usually means a blown diode in the alt.