DOHC PCM
#2
RE: DOHC PCM
Be very careful with 2nd Gen Neon PCMs. You can't swap them easily and even the cleanest swap will require a trip to the dealer to program the PCM. I know from bitter firsthand knowledge the problems. I've posted the following facts before but I'll do it again so you get some idea of what you need to do.
First and most important the PCM in any Neon after 2000 cannot simply be swapped for one you get out of a similar car, even the same year. There are 4 numbers on the PCM that must match and then you can swap them but you will have to tow the car to the dealer to have the VIN programmed into the new computer. I didn’t know this and thought I could swap computers between two 2000 Neons. I was lucky and only hosed the computer in one of them.
Second you can hose a car that runs perfectly by taking the computer out and putting it in another car. I thought that was impossible but it’s not. Apparently there are systems in the car that can spike a PCM and if you simply replace it then you wind up with 2 dead computers. My local dealer and a repair shop that specializes in MOPAR computer problems verified this to me.
Third the PCM in a Neon can ‘forget’ if you remove it. I couldn’t understand how this can happen but I’ve been assured it can. It doesn’t always happen but apparently it can. You disconnect the computer and when you hook it back up it’s forgotten the VIN. This is apparently something that happens to OBD2 computers in MOPARs and GMs. If it happens you have to tow the car to the dealer or a shop that has the equipment and have the computer reprogrammed. Again this was verified by my local dealer and a local shop that specializes in MOPAR computers. I still don’t understand how this can happen but occasionally it will. Just disconnecting the battery doesn’t do it but unplugging the PCM can.
I’ve learned this all by very expensive experience. I now know more than I ever wanted to about the PCMs in Neons. I spent an entire day running around looking for a computer before a guy in one of the last junkyards I went to told me about the VIN problem. If you need a new computer order one off of ebay and they’ll program it and ship it to you. Just remember if it died then it’s possible that it was one of the systems in the car that killed it and when you put the new on in you could kill it too. The best thing to do is tow it to the dealer and let them fix it. The only downside to that is they’ll charge you for a new PCM.
First and most important the PCM in any Neon after 2000 cannot simply be swapped for one you get out of a similar car, even the same year. There are 4 numbers on the PCM that must match and then you can swap them but you will have to tow the car to the dealer to have the VIN programmed into the new computer. I didn’t know this and thought I could swap computers between two 2000 Neons. I was lucky and only hosed the computer in one of them.
Second you can hose a car that runs perfectly by taking the computer out and putting it in another car. I thought that was impossible but it’s not. Apparently there are systems in the car that can spike a PCM and if you simply replace it then you wind up with 2 dead computers. My local dealer and a repair shop that specializes in MOPAR computer problems verified this to me.
Third the PCM in a Neon can ‘forget’ if you remove it. I couldn’t understand how this can happen but I’ve been assured it can. It doesn’t always happen but apparently it can. You disconnect the computer and when you hook it back up it’s forgotten the VIN. This is apparently something that happens to OBD2 computers in MOPARs and GMs. If it happens you have to tow the car to the dealer or a shop that has the equipment and have the computer reprogrammed. Again this was verified by my local dealer and a local shop that specializes in MOPAR computers. I still don’t understand how this can happen but occasionally it will. Just disconnecting the battery doesn’t do it but unplugging the PCM can.
I’ve learned this all by very expensive experience. I now know more than I ever wanted to about the PCMs in Neons. I spent an entire day running around looking for a computer before a guy in one of the last junkyards I went to told me about the VIN problem. If you need a new computer order one off of ebay and they’ll program it and ship it to you. Just remember if it died then it’s possible that it was one of the systems in the car that killed it and when you put the new on in you could kill it too. The best thing to do is tow it to the dealer and let them fix it. The only downside to that is they’ll charge you for a new PCM.
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