mrd
Active Member
- Joined
- June 25, 2005
- Messages
- 65
- Reaction score
- 0
- City, State
- Fort Bragg, NC
- Year, Model & Trim Level
- 1995 Limited Edition
I have a 95; came with 4.0 OHV and 4R55E. The PCM manages the engine and also the transmission, including controlling shift points. My vehicle could use some tweaking on the shift points.
There's a product called the Baumannator TCS:
http://www.becontrols.com/products/tcs.htm
This gives you precise control over the electronic transmission, unfortunately they currently don't support the 4R55E, only AOD-E, 4R70W and E4OD.
There's a product called the TruSpeed Speed Signal Recalibrator made by Superlift:
http://www.superlift.com/products/misc/truspeed.asp
It allows manual adjustment of the speedo gear's signal prior to reaching the PCM/instrument panel. I was wondering if anyone has used this and if it made much of a difference in shift points. My tires are almost stock diameter, maybe off by an inch.
I was also wondering if anyone has done any reverse engineering of the PCM circuit. Not the PCM itself, but all of the signal inputs and outputs. It would be an interesting exercise to build a replacement PCM, and could use any information that has already been accumulated on it.
There's a product called the Baumannator TCS:
http://www.becontrols.com/products/tcs.htm
This gives you precise control over the electronic transmission, unfortunately they currently don't support the 4R55E, only AOD-E, 4R70W and E4OD.
There's a product called the TruSpeed Speed Signal Recalibrator made by Superlift:
http://www.superlift.com/products/misc/truspeed.asp
It allows manual adjustment of the speedo gear's signal prior to reaching the PCM/instrument panel. I was wondering if anyone has used this and if it made much of a difference in shift points. My tires are almost stock diameter, maybe off by an inch.
I was also wondering if anyone has done any reverse engineering of the PCM circuit. Not the PCM itself, but all of the signal inputs and outputs. It would be an interesting exercise to build a replacement PCM, and could use any information that has already been accumulated on it.