The old RY139 GPR was self controlling and is used on mechanical IP rigs, has 4 terminals, black conn.
The new RY383 GPR is PCM controlled and is used on DS4 IP rigs, has 3 terminals, grey conn.
Both connectors have 5 term. spaces and look the same but are keyed different and will not interchange.
That is for military type TPS. There are only 2 types used on these IP's.
You can either find a pigtail and splice it into the OEM TPS conn. wires,
Or make an adapter harness like this.
Can't imagine what they did with the FSO and top.
Post photos when you get it off.
Do you have the mil IP model number? DB2831-????
And the 6.2 IP number?
The 6.2 top and solenoids should work, easy swap.
Some mil IP's use the normal TPS and some use the military TPS.
Either TPS will work but are not interchangeable.
The mil TPS usually costs much less than the civilian part.
The GV unit changes the gear ratios like a transfer case would in low range.
I cannot find any verification that the EZ-TCU works with 4wd.
So that may be a problem.
It would work in HI range but what happens in low range?
I guess you could call them and ask.
On the OEM VSSB on pin 15 is a LT BLU/BLK wire.
That is the 4000 PPM speedo feed.
The TCU has a speedo output on pin 24.
Remove/cut that LT BLU wire from the VSSB conn. and connect
to pin 24 of the TCU.
Page 12 of the TCU manual shows how to set that up and also to calibrate if it is needed.
The ESS should put out a 0-5v. pulsing A/C signal when the engine is running.
It is possible that that TCM must have a digital RPM signal.
I have no hands on experience with the unit and cannot find any info that will
verify that.
It is possible that the 3-wire CPS used on the DS4 IP engines...
You probably should splice the BLK "A" wire from the ESS to a wire on Pin 23 BLK/PNK
of the TCI module.
Then the “B” wire to Pin 12 YEL.
Many military 6.2/6.5 4L80 owners have done this and it works.
I have always wondered why the company never addressed using the ESS or a compatible CPS (2 wire...
The ESS has an 8 tooth reluctor in it, so it gives 4 pulses per crank rev (it's driven off the cam, so it runs at 1/2 crank speed). It's just a regular variable reluctance type speed sensor, so each output pulse is a single cycle roughly sinusoidal pulse that varies in amplitude with engine...