Nothing wrong with the traditional Ford alternator with separate regulator. But long ago I got into going with cheapest alternator with built in regulator so I didnt have to purchase both alternator and regulator (warranty void on rebuilt alternator if you dont replace the regulator same time on vehicles with separate regulator). That means the ubiquitous 63A GM alternator from the seventies that are like $25 at Autozone last time I bought one. They fit the Ford brackets with addition of some washers so not exactly brain surgery. Anything I have owned that needed an alternator whatever make, thats what I put on. I've put them on tractors, Dodges, Fords, Volvos, VWs, various Japanese vehicles if there is enough room. So on. The exception was old '72 Courier I used to have. Not enough room for GM alternator, it had a Hitachi alternator with separate regulator. I owned and drove that thing for 15 years, still had the Hitachi alternator it came with when I sold it, though I replaced regulator with an aftermarket solid state regulator made for '60s era GM, like $7 compared to the replacement Hitachi regulator for like $40. Just had to look up the wiring and splice things together. That Hitachi was one long lasting alternator, cant ever dispute that. Only put out like 30A but that was enough.