Try
www.bikebandit.comThey're cheaper than a dealership but it's still pretty damn rough! $190 for the regulator. If the whole alternator goes $885!!! Change that battery tomorrow!!! If you have to ride short shift it to keep the RPM's low and fill the battery up to the top to soak up some of the excess voltage.
If you need to change out the regulator or the entire unit(I doubt it it's still pumping out power)you might want to check around for motorcycle wreckers.
Usually this happens when you get riders who buy a bike and have no phucking clue on what their doing so they don't even know you need to keep the battery filled with water so as the water evapourates the regulator/rectifier has to suck up all that juice that a full battery was supposed to absorb. So eventually it burns out. You're not too much off the mark so you may be ok with just a new battery. I've bought alot of bikes over the years and I've seen all kinds of crazyness that people do. When I buy a new bike I do this immediately no matter how the bike looks.
1. New battery no matter how good it looks($30-$40)
2. New oil and filter($30)
3. Fresh gas and a high rpm run in on the highway.($20)
4. Replace the brake fluid and bleed the brakes($20)
So for about $100 I covered most of the major systems on the bike. It's a good $100 insurance policy.
I bought a bike once that was basically brand new for $600 once because it wasn't running. The battery was dead and the fool didn't know it. All I did was replace the battery, clean out the carbs and got a bike with only 9000 kms on it for $600! The old battery looked like the original that came with the bike and the leads were rusted and there was not a drop of fluid in the battery. Not even moisture! You get all kinds of people riding bikes, alot unfortunately buy a bike for a summer or two to "look cool" and in the meantime they don't do shit to the bike and drive it until something breaks from lack of maintenance. It's a good way to pick up bikes from people who probably shouldn't have bought one in the first place but it's a bit of a gamble. Best to replace the cheap but important components to give yourself a piece of mind. All this stuff I suggested shouldn't cost you more than $100 and only take a few hours max. If the brake fluid looks ok you can even skimp on that step if you're unsure on how to replace brake fluid and bleed brakes.