in addition to the dealer scan tools, this is the Chrysler hand held sensor. It reads the pressure and the sensor ID if that is needed for location.
There have been several different systems over the years with Chrysler. As mentioned there are basic and advanced systems. The basic system shows "low tire" and you need to figure out which one. If it is really a low tire that part is easy, especially when one side is flat! If not you can use the tools, (dealer scan tool displays sensor ID and pressure) or process of elimination to diagnose. The advanced systems show location (sensor ID) and displays it on the dash. The old premium system used three hard wired sensors in three wheel wells to determine sensor location. The actual pressure (for all systems) is sent wireless to the WCM/WIN/TPSM etc. and obviously is never hard wired. That sets it up for interference from anything on the 315 or 433mh band. I had a HD truck a year or so ago that made me crazy. It would throw the light at random. Many parts replaced, turns out the guy had added a back up camera that was causing signal interference. He wrecked the rear end and when the body shop disconnected the camera the problem stopped. That one came very close to a buyback, and it wasn't even Chryslers fault.
The newest systems use one sensor (receiver module) in one wheel well, and determines the tire location by direction of rotation (part of the wheel sensor) and signal strength (distance of wheel sensor to receiver).
Also the aftermarket has done a pretty good job of covering the major manufacturers with replacement parts.
There have been several different systems over the years with Chrysler. As mentioned there are basic and advanced systems. The basic system shows "low tire" and you need to figure out which one. If it is really a low tire that part is easy, especially when one side is flat! If not you can use the tools, (dealer scan tool displays sensor ID and pressure) or process of elimination to diagnose. The advanced systems show location (sensor ID) and displays it on the dash. The old premium system used three hard wired sensors in three wheel wells to determine sensor location. The actual pressure (for all systems) is sent wireless to the WCM/WIN/TPSM etc. and obviously is never hard wired. That sets it up for interference from anything on the 315 or 433mh band. I had a HD truck a year or so ago that made me crazy. It would throw the light at random. Many parts replaced, turns out the guy had added a back up camera that was causing signal interference. He wrecked the rear end and when the body shop disconnected the camera the problem stopped. That one came very close to a buyback, and it wasn't even Chryslers fault.
The newest systems use one sensor (receiver module) in one wheel well, and determines the tire location by direction of rotation (part of the wheel sensor) and signal strength (distance of wheel sensor to receiver).
Also the aftermarket has done a pretty good job of covering the major manufacturers with replacement parts.