Hollon71
SHO Member
Question. Do you think changing the SHO ECU would help clean up things that the SHO is doing?
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The ECU's are pretty solid. Unless it was pulled and has visible damage or maybe known to have been under water for a significant time, I haven't heard of them going bad.
Have you confirmed the cams have been welded? If not, your frustrations may be just starting.... Since the torque converter and solenoids have been replaced, the fluid level may be correct, but worth confirming anyway. The transmission fluid level would be the first thing to check for a rough shifting concern. If you have access to a scan tool that can monitor the transmission, check to make sure the Transmission Fluid Temperature (TFT) sensor is reporting realistic values. If the TFT sensor always reports that the transmission is cold, that will firm up the shifts. I don't recall whether or not shift solenoid pressures are available via a scan tool, but if so, making sure those are reasonable would be a good data point as well.
-Rod
My brother-in-law advised me about that. I might take it up to his dealership so they could do it.You will need 2 keys and a scan tool or FORScan to program the PATS in the new PCM.
I came across part # XF1Z-12A581-EBThe 99 harness is unique, and the 99's were low production. So yes, very difficult to find one.
Go after the known trouble spots. Chances are you CAN fix this with some persistence.
That ground point on the firewall has been 75% of my issues in my experiences.