Is this my new section

Is this my new section

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Discussion

Steve_M

Original Poster:

598 posts

242 months

Thursday 11th December 2008
quotequote all
Hi everybody,

I have traveled the highways and byways of car ownership and trawled through the halls of Pistonheads for a while now.

I have now arrived at an '07 Jeep Grand Cherokee SRT8 V8 6.1L Hemi and I love it biggrin

So is this where I should be hanging out now???

Motown Junk

2,041 posts

224 months

Thursday 11th December 2008
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Thought Jeep owners hung out in Brighton? wink

Anyhoo, welcome to the section of PH with the biggest carbon footprint biggrin

Matt Harper

6,770 posts

208 months

Friday 12th December 2008
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Similar situation - though in FL not TX. My 6.1 sits in an '07 300C. SRT's are the ultimate (affordable) street-sleepers (Neons and Nitro's excepted). All in all, very formidible, though there is limited interest here. I think UK based American car owners tend to fall into set categories: Corvette/Viper, Mustang and rusty old smoker - we kind of fall between the cracks.

Tom74

658 posts

237 months

Friday 12th December 2008
quotequote all
Matt Harper said:
Similar situation - though in FL not TX. My 6.1 sits in an '07 300C. SRT's are the ultimate (affordable) street-sleepers (Neons and Nitro's excepted). All in all, very formidible, though there is limited interest here. I think UK based American car owners tend to fall into set categories: Corvette/Viper, Mustang and rusty old smoker - we kind of fall between the cracks.
Not true, I thought about buying a Fiero the other day.........wait....rusty old smoker, check!

Matt Harper

6,770 posts

208 months

Monday 15th December 2008
quotequote all
Steve_M said:
I have now arrived at an '07 Jeep Grand Cherokee SRT8 V8 6.1L Hemi and I love it biggrin
Forgot to mention Fuse # 11. You're familiar with fuse 11, right?
Just in case you are not, pulling this fuse for 10 secs erases the ECU's memory, regarding previous engine/trans mode. The ECU 'learns' drivers style, so if the previous owner was a "Driving Miss Daisy", the ECU will have learned soft shifts, lower up-shift r.p.m., less aggressive kick-down etc.
Pulling the fuse puts you back to original (angrier) setting.
ESC full-off mode makes things a lot more fun too, if the Jeep has that option. Full-off achieved by hitting the ESC button twice and holding it depressed until "ESC Full-Off" is displayed in the electronic read-out.

Captain Cadillac

2,974 posts

194 months

Wednesday 17th December 2008
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SRT-8? Those things are hysterical! Nothing like an SUV that can smoke virtually anything on the road.. I love it!

mutz nutz

38 posts

195 months

Wednesday 31st December 2008
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Matt Harper said :
Forgot to mention Fuse # 11. You're familiar with fuse 11, right?
Just in case you are not, pulling this fuse for 10 secs erases the ECU's memory, regarding previous engine/trans mode. The ECU 'learns' drivers style, so if the previous owner was a "Driving Miss Daisy", the ECU will have learned soft shifts, lower up-shift r.p.m., less aggressive kick-down etc.
Pulling the fuse puts you back to original (angrier) setting.
ESC full-off mode makes things a lot more fun too, if the Jeep has that option. Full-off achieved by hitting the ESC button twice and holding it depressed until "ESC Full-Off" is displayed in the electronic read-out.
[/quote]


Does anybody know of anything like this for a Dodge Ram 5.7 Hemi 2003, just wondered !!

Edited by mutz nutz on Wednesday 31st December 09:41

Madscanner

536 posts

201 months

Wednesday 31st December 2008
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Tom74 said:
Not true, I thought about buying a Fiero the other day.........wait....rusty old smoker, check!
Odd - although both of mine are old, neither is a smoker or has much more than a bit of surface rust...

Matt Harper

6,770 posts

208 months

Wednesday 31st December 2008
quotequote all
mutz nutz said:
Does anybody know of anything like this for a Dodge Ram 5.7 Hemi 2003, just wondered !!

Edited by mutz nutz on Wednesday 31st December 09:41
No, sorry - this only applies to the adaptive TCM in the Benzo 5G-Tronic transmission (Auto-Stick) in the RT and SRT versions of the 300C, Charger, Challenger and Cherokee with 5.7/6.1 Hemi. (as well as a number of V8/12 Mercedes Benz models). The Ram has an Indiana Transmission gearbox but they do benefit from the installation of a Transgo shift-kit which gives a more positive hook-up, but does compromise smoothness of up-shift - but the upside is that it also strengthens your neck muscles.

mutz nutz

38 posts

195 months

Thursday 1st January 2009
quotequote all
Matt Harper said:
mutz nutz said:
Does anybody know of anything like this for a Dodge Ram 5.7 Hemi 2003, just wondered !!

Edited by mutz nutz on Wednesday 31st December 09:41
No, sorry - this only applies to the adaptive TCM in the Benzo 5G-Tronic transmission (Auto-Stick) in the RT and SRT versions of the 300C, Charger, Challenger and Cherokee with 5.7/6.1 Hemi. (as well as a number of V8/12 Mercedes Benz models). The Ram has an Indiana Transmission gearbox but they do benefit from the installation of a Transgo shift-kit which gives a more positive hook-up, but does compromise smoothness of up-shift - but the upside is that it also strengthens your neck muscles.
Thanks for that, worth asking I thought, its the only way you learn !

HD Adam

5,155 posts

191 months

Friday 2nd January 2009
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mutz nutz said:
Matt Harper said:
mutz nutz said:
Does anybody know of anything like this for a Dodge Ram 5.7 Hemi 2003, just wondered !!

Edited by mutz nutz on Wednesday 31st December 09:41
No, sorry - this only applies to the adaptive TCM in the Benzo 5G-Tronic transmission (Auto-Stick) in the RT and SRT versions of the 300C, Charger, Challenger and Cherokee with 5.7/6.1 Hemi. (as well as a number of V8/12 Mercedes Benz models). The Ram has an Indiana Transmission gearbox but they do benefit from the installation of a Transgo shift-kit which gives a more positive hook-up, but does compromise smoothness of up-shift - but the upside is that it also strengthens your neck muscles.
Thanks for that, worth asking I thought, its the only way you learn !
If you disconnect the battery on your Dodge Ram, the KAM in the ECU will reset to the factory default settings and the adaptive strategy will be lost. It's exactly the same thing.

Roo.

11,503 posts

214 months

Friday 2nd January 2009
quotequote all
Steve_M said:
Hi everybody,

I have traveled the highways and byways of car ownership and trawled through the halls of Pistonheads for a while now.

I have now arrived at an '07 Jeep Grand Cherokee SRT8 V8 6.1L Hemi and I love it biggrin

So is this where I should be hanging out now???
If you depress the two bottom inner switches on the face of the steering wheel it will bring up a diiferent set of menus on the LCD in the dash. One of which is a 0-60 timer that starts as soon as you start moving.

Steve_M

Original Poster:

598 posts

242 months

Saturday 3rd January 2009
quotequote all
Roo. said:
Steve_M said:
Hi everybody,

I have traveled the highways and byways of car ownership and trawled through the halls of Pistonheads for a while now.

I have now arrived at an '07 Jeep Grand Cherokee SRT8 V8 6.1L Hemi and I love it biggrin

So is this where I should be hanging out now???
If you depress the two bottom inner switches on the face of the steering wheel it will bring up a diiferent set of menus on the LCD in the dash. One of which is a 0-60 timer that starts as soon as you start moving.
Tried this got nothing, exactly which 2 buttons do you mean, on the face of the wheel or audio controls behind?

mutz nutz

38 posts

195 months

Sunday 4th January 2009
quotequote all
HD Adam said:
mutz nutz said:
Matt Harper said:
mutz nutz said:
Does anybody know of anything like this for a Dodge Ram 5.7 Hemi 2003, just wondered !!

Edited by mutz nutz on Wednesday 31st December 09:41
No, sorry - this only applies to the adaptive TCM in the Benzo 5G-Tronic transmission (Auto-Stick) in the RT and SRT versions of the 300C, Charger, Challenger and Cherokee with 5.7/6.1 Hemi. (as well as a number of V8/12 Mercedes Benz models). The Ram has an Indiana Transmission gearbox but they do benefit from the installation of a Transgo shift-kit which gives a more positive hook-up, but does compromise smoothness of up-shift - but the upside is that it also strengthens your neck muscles.
Thanks for that, worth asking I thought, its the only way you learn !
If you disconnect the battery on your Dodge Ram, the KAM in the ECU will reset to the factory default settings and the adaptive strategy will be lost. It's exactly the same thing.
Thanks for that, may well try it, Regards.

viper55

99 posts

202 months

Sunday 11th January 2009
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would this apply to my dodge 2500 cummings ? it had been "chiped up " before it was imported and was used to tow boats before we got it??

HD Adam

5,155 posts

191 months

Sunday 11th January 2009
quotequote all
Disconnecting the battery will only delete the adaptive strategy "learned" by the ECM in the KAM (which stands for Keep Alive Memory). There is no internal power supply so the "keep alive" part is lost.
When this happens, the ECM resets itself to the factory parameters. Anything learned about your driving style and how the engine operates is lost until the ECM learns again. This takes a few driving cycles and is constantly updated as long as the battery stays connected.
If you connect a code reader to the OBDII port after you have disconnected the battery (or flash tuned the ECM), you will see a P1000 error code. It isn't actually a real error code, it just shows that the ECM hasn't been through enough driving cycles yet for emissions testing.

If your ECM has been "chipped", that is a different matter. One way of doing this is to actually install a chip with the new program on it. If you physically remove the chip, the programming returns to the factory setting.
If the ECM has been flashed with a handheld tuner, that program stays in the RAM untill the ECM is either returned to stock or overwritten with a new tune again. Disconnecting the battery makes no difference as the factory tune has been physically overwritten.

Just about all hand held tuners lock themselves to a particular ECM on the first use. That's to stop you tuning multiple vehicles with one handheld.
The tuner is useless to be used on another vehicle. If your car/truck has been tuned previously, you should still have the tuner or there's a very good chance that the previous owner returned the vehicle to stock and kept it to use in their next vehicle.

300bhp/ton

41,030 posts

197 months

Friday 16th January 2009
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Tom74 said:
Matt Harper said:
Similar situation - though in FL not TX. My 6.1 sits in an '07 300C. SRT's are the ultimate (affordable) street-sleepers (Neons and Nitro's excepted). All in all, very formidible, though there is limited interest here. I think UK based American car owners tend to fall into set categories: Corvette/Viper, Mustang and rusty old smoker - we kind of fall between the cracks.
Not true, I thought about buying a Fiero the other day.........wait....rusty old smoker, check!
Not so, the Fiero had a galvanised chassis and composite body panels. So smokey maybe, but it should be fairly rust free.

lukev8

47 posts

203 months

Monday 2nd February 2009
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Hi steve good choice on srt8.... would like to c how my 2000 v8 holds up against it....