Can totally sympathize with cost justification ..
But you'd think a regulator/brush box would be a much cheaper way forward for less than $100, than the $300 for the complete alternator.
If the bearing on the alternator has seized, it won't spin once the belt is removed .. so easy to track that down.
And it'd screech like hell and burn the belt out in no time, and probably not allow the engine to turn over when cranking at start time too.
With the tensioner, something to watch out for, is that when you 'un tension it' to remove the belt, that it returns back to it's rest position immediately .. not slowly(like a hydraulic movement).
We just did my brothers, and even tho the tensioner had tension in it, it's return action felt lethargic like a gas damper slowly pumping itself back to it's extended position.
It should snap back to it's free state immediately.


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