So far as I know, none of the aftermarket replacement boxes require a 4 pin resistor. This was a running production change by Mopar
The older "5 pin" ECU requires a 4 pin resistor
The newer "4 pin" ECU can use a 2 pin, if you have a 4, it just isn't doing anything on the "second half."
You can NOT identify a 4 / 5 pin ECU by looking. Many boxes are electrically 4 pin, but have 5 physical pins. Only way to tell is "ohm out" the 5th pin and see if it goes anywhere
Unless you go "junkyarding" I doubt you'll buy a new box that is 5 pin
Diagrams: (from MyMopar)
Older 5 pin box, 4 pin resistor The "U" cutout in the ceramac ballast orients the resistor, which is different resistance on each side
Newer 4 pin box, 2 pin resistor. Notice that they essentially eliminated the "left half."
You might also keep this in the back of your head..........If your Mopar ECU breaks on the road, and you have your old points distributor, all you need to do is exchange distributors, unhook the coil NEG wire, and hook the distributor up to the coil NEG terminal. Yank the plug off the ECU. 5 minutes, and off you go