coxpn2
coxpn2
The basic history of my suburban is as follows:
Bought it with a broken crank, knew it needed a replacement engine.
Suburban had 4" exhaust, Heath chip, turbomaster.
I bought a same year (1995) K1500 (stock) and pulled the complete engine (turbo/IP/etc), putting it in the suburban. Kept the same Heath chip in the suburban.
I've never been happy with the power that the truck puts out... nor the mileage. It appears to run fine, no issues to speak of, but I tow a couple 5k trailers (total weight) and it brings the truck to its knees. Even a 1500 lb. trailer makes it slow down a lot.
The question is: is using the heath chip ok, or could it not be "correct" for the used engine I swapped over? I'm not sure how it communicates with the truck... my thinking is that if the chip was "designed" for the old engine and IP, then it wouldn't be matched with the new one? Or maybe the chip doesn't care... its just a thought I had. Any thoughts from anyone?
Bought it with a broken crank, knew it needed a replacement engine.
Suburban had 4" exhaust, Heath chip, turbomaster.
I bought a same year (1995) K1500 (stock) and pulled the complete engine (turbo/IP/etc), putting it in the suburban. Kept the same Heath chip in the suburban.
I've never been happy with the power that the truck puts out... nor the mileage. It appears to run fine, no issues to speak of, but I tow a couple 5k trailers (total weight) and it brings the truck to its knees. Even a 1500 lb. trailer makes it slow down a lot.
The question is: is using the heath chip ok, or could it not be "correct" for the used engine I swapped over? I'm not sure how it communicates with the truck... my thinking is that if the chip was "designed" for the old engine and IP, then it wouldn't be matched with the new one? Or maybe the chip doesn't care... its just a thought I had. Any thoughts from anyone?