focinite wrote:Lost power and then blew the ignition fuse? Sounds like a shorted coil. WCS possible pcm. What engine? I had a wire pull out of my coil harness once...took about four hours to figure that one out. check your bases....air fuel spark compression then go from there
Genius.
Now get some cams with good over lap and you dont need egr. I have found its the simplest dumb thing that causes the biggest problems.....in life...
No matter the problem its some ting dum.
Mqke them wires shorter and rout them away from the egr
focinite wrote:Lost power and then blew the ignition fuse? Sounds like a shorted coil. WCS possible pcm. What engine? I had a wire pull out of my coil harness once...took about four hours to figure that one out. check your bases....air fuel spark compression then go from there
Genius.
Now get some cams with good over lap and you dont need egr. I have found its the simplest dumb thing that causes the biggest problems.....in life...
No matter the problem its some ting dum.
Mqke them wires shorter and rout them away from the egr
Thats the plan, with the wires anyway. Cams are just so spendy. I think it will be plenty fun without them also.
The ecu was put in at the dealer, but they couldn't get into it to match my keys to it. Anyone know a dealer that specializes in this, or would know more? Steve, have a few questions for you too. Why would they need to take the key codes out of the old ecu, then put them back in when they put the stock computer back in? Thats after they tried to use the pw comp. I just dont want to pay for nothing.
EDIT:Did you have a different PCM installed then they re-installed the orgional one? If so when you remove a module and perform program module installation to a new module, it removed the VIN from the module you have removed. They would then have to do a program module installation to the orgional module if they were to re-install it
PATS is stored to the instrument cluster, not the PCM. If they re-installed the orgional PCM they shouldn't have had to do anything with the keys. The only thing they might have had to do is perform a perameter reset which clears any PATS (theft) codes in the modules. There could be issues with the PATS ring or wiring or the instrument cluster itself
FocusMech.73155 wrote:EDIT:Did you have a different PCM installed then they re-installed the orgional one? If so when you remove a module and perform program module installation to a new module, it removed the VIN from the module you have removed. They would then have to do a program module installation to the orgional module if they were to re-install it
PATS is stored to the instrument cluster, not the PCM. If they re-installed the orgional PCM they shouldn't have had to do anything with the keys. The only thing they might have had to do is perform a perameter reset which clears any PATS (theft) codes in the modules. There could be issues with the PATS ring or wiring or the instrument cluster itself
Yes I guess that makes sense. Had them try to put the new unmatched pwsc tuned comp into the car to match the pats keys to it, so I didn't have to tune the car. Should I ask them to try that proceedure? Or could I just slap it in and get the pats code from the dealership by the vin off the ecu, then have them code the keys?
The keys aren't coded to the car or PCM, the car/PCM is programmed to recognize the keys. They should be able to slap in the tuned PCM and program it to recognize your keys.
Just an FYI.....if Im the guy Steve is refering to.......I have Jury duty next week so I will not be around. Either way, you don't need to be a engineer to figure a way to get a PCM to function in a car.