There are many names that are used for engine
controllers like ECM, ECU or EMS, but perhaps the
most common one and the most general is computer.
Engine controllers date back to the 1970s but really
became engine controllers in 1984 with the
introduction of turbos to production engines. By 1993,
these engine computers were used across the board
on all Chrysler production engines, cars and trucks.
Since then we have learned that engine controllers are
very engine-specific and definitely do NOT fit in the
one-size-fits-all category. Engine controllers tend to be
programmed to the vehicle (car or truck), model year of
the vehicle (2006 vs. 2004), engine size in the vehicle
(5.2L vs. 392) and almost all engine hardware like cams
and heads. While there are programmable units that
can be adjusted on a PC , ideally the baseline software
program is close for your engine and hardware;
however, you should be prepared for tech-support
consultations. This is a very complicated subject.
An engine controller or computer manages the
complete fuel curve through the fuel injectors, one or
more per cylinder. Additionally, this same controller
manages the complete spark advance curve—total
spark advance, the curve itself and the vacuum
aspects. It takes a lot of sensors to perform correctly.
In researching Mopar® engine controllers for this
article, we found that the details on one controller
part number could easily fill this whole column, so
we'll just hit some highlights and let you fill in the
details by referencing the Mopar Performance
Parts catalog.
There is no obvious order in discussing controllers so
we'll start with the largest and heaviest. The 392 Gen
III HEMI® Crate engine P5153605 is a complete engine
assembly which includes an engine-specific
controller. The fuel-injected version listed makes 525
hp and 510 lb-ft of torque, which is very impressive.
The carbureted version of this 392 crate engine is
P5153604, makes 540 hp and it comes with an
870-cfm carburetor. Obviously, on this version the
engine controller doesn't control the carb but the
crate engine assembly does include its own, unique
controller which manages the distributorless ignition
system. The service unit (engine controller only) for
the carbureted crate engine is P5153608 while the
service unit for the fuel-injected unit is P5153528.
Both of these controllers are programmable so they
have more flexibility and can be used on many
different engine projects.
In the last few years the Gen III HEMI has been very
popular for engine swapping and many unique
applications. The current Gen III engine sizes are
5.7L, 6.1L and 392. While the 392 is the largest and
most powerful, the 5.7L and 6.1L have been used in
production vehicles and are available at many salvage
yards. When using this approach with a used engine,
a word of caution: consider the engine's front cover
because truck engines and car engines use two
different front covers. In general, the truck front cover
locates the accessories higher. This could be
advantageous for street rods with tall, narrow engine
compartments but not desirable on other wide,
low-hood engine compartments.
For several years, Mopar Performance has sold a 5.7L
HEMI Crate engine (Gen III). The service engine
controller for this carbureted 5.7L HEMI crate engine
is P4510816, or P4510342 if it was a fuel-injected
version. Both of these service units are non-programmable.
This means that these units work best if the
engine stays close to the stock 5.7L condition. Recommendations:
use with the stock 5.7L cam only. For
swapping any of the Gen III engines into non-production-
based vehicles you will need an engine wiring
harness like P5153606AB (for programmable engine
controller, with 5.7L HEMI with carbureted intake and
2003–05 coils). There are many engine wiring
harnesses, so look up the one that best suits your
installation. Note that in the engine wiring harness
description the specific coils are mentioned: 2003–05
coils and 2006-and-later coils. Both of these coils are
standard production units and are serviced at your
local dealer. The year of the engine defines the coils
because the valve covers changed in 2006 and the
coil mounts on the spark plug and valve covers.
Another item that is used in the fuel injection system
is the throttle body or carburetor and its basic
specifications are very important to the controller.
The 525 hp 392 HEMI crate engine uses an 80-mm
single-bore throttle body which is also serviced
(P5153689). There is also a 4-barrel throttle body
P4510363 which requires a new intake manifold. The
5.7L HEMI crate engine that used the carburetor was
based on the 600 cfm Holley vacuum-secondary unit.
If you want to use an Edelbrock/Carter carburetor,
then select a 600 cfm AVS unit but expect to do some
calibration work.
To race† a 5.7L/6.1L/392 Gen III HEMI in many
classes, including Stock classes from A through F and
all Super Stock classes, you must have an SFI damper.
The damper for use with the truck timing cover is
P5153631, and the one for use with the car/Jeep®
timing cover is P5153630. These dampers are unique
because the multi-groove front belt is driven by the
standard damper, so these SFI dampers have the
grooves cut on the outside diameter. Both dampers
come with a keyway machined in. Tip: The production
Gen III HEMI engines do not currently come with
keyway-grooved cranks. Mopar services the 392
crank—P5153578 (3.795" stroke)—with the keyway
groove machined in. This could be important if you
add a supercharger to the engine. If required, have
your local machine shop add the keyway groove to
your crank and use one of these SFI dampers.
Before we leave the 5.7L HEMI fuel injection topic,
there are two powertrain controller upgrades for
the 5.7L HEMI engine when used in cars: 2005
Charger/300/Magnum P5153331 and 2006
Charger/300/Magnum P5153450. These are best
used with HP camshaft P5153325AB and lifters
P5153570AB. Also consider adding the transmission
(automatic) controller upgrade P5153332, for 2004–06
Charger/300/Magnum 5.7L engine. I recommend
using with the controllers listed above.
The fuel injection kit for use with the 360 Magnum®
Crate engine is P5153590 (automatic transmission).
This kit includes a JTEC engine controller. The kit is
based on the 4-barrel throttle body and single-plane
HP intake manifold and 33 lb/hr fuel injectors. The
A-engine ended production in 1992 and the Magnum
family went out of production in the early 2000s.
Getting new or HP parts for these engines has been
difficult, especially cast iron blocks. The new
Magnum cast iron blocks— P5153579, 5.2L with
3.910" finished bore and P5153452, 5.9L with 4.000"
finished bore—have a trick feature. They have a
small hole drilled between the tappet bores of the
same cylinder. This hole is used to hold the special
dog bone tappet locators (P5155275). These dog
bones come with special flanged screws and small
springs that allow these dog-bones to be used with
the production Magnum hydraulic roller tappet
without the production spider. This system could be
added to older HP blocks designed for A-engines and
this opens up the door for hydraulic roller cam use in
these older engines.
If you want to add engine controllers and fuel
injection to your A-engine or Magnum small block
then you need an intake manifold to hold the
injectors. The Magnum engine has a single-plane
aluminum intake for use with the standard 2-barrel
throttle body like P5007398AB (with EGR). The
4-barrel throttle body version is P5007790. Both have
the injector bosses already machined. The 426 HEMI
(Gen II) should use P4876188 which has bosses but
will require machining. The best choice for the 440
RB-engine is P4529463 but it will require the bosses
to be added and machined. Tip: The key to installing
electronic fuel injection onto 426 HEMI (Gen II) and
440 RB wedge engines is a dual-pickup (dual trigger)
distributor which is available from Accel (Mr. Gasket).
The Viper V-10 package also uses an engine
controller in production. The high-performance
version is P4510172AB (2003–06) and P5155254
(2008–09). There are also HP engine controllers for
the Ram SRT10® truck built using the all-aluminum
Viper V-10 engine like P5153335 (2005 version – the
'04 and '06 versions are also available).
There are turbo upgrade kits that include four
injectors and an HP engine controller for the turbo
Caliber SRT4® like P5155175 and also for the turbo
Neon SRT4 like P4510910 (2005 version) and for the
2003–07 turbo PT Crusier models like P5153846 (2007
without ABS). See the Mopar Performance parts
catalog for more part numbers and added details Click here.
Additionally,there are engine controllers for many of the older
Neons like the '95 DOHC (P5007034).
The first electronic fuel injection kit that Mopar
Performance put together was designed for the 4.2L
in-line 6-cylinder Jeep engines mated with automatic
transmissions (1981–90), kit P5249686AE. The
manual transmission version is P5249610AE. It still
offers greatly increased power and torque and many
off-road features desired by off-road customers. This
kit includes a special engine controller which is also
serviced separately: P5007146 auto, P5007147
manual. Don't forget that these kits require a special
crank damper—like P5249687 (V-belt version).
Whether you are swapping engine controllers and
fuel injection parts onto your carbureted engine or
swapping a fuel injected engine into a previously
carbureted vehicle or even a newly built vehicle, you
will have to sort the complete package out once it is
running. This sorting-out process is called fuel
calibration. To help with any calibration process, it
can be handy to have a boost/vacuum gauge, like
77060032, installed where you can easily read it. This
gauge design has the Mopar "M" in the center of the
face and reads both boost pressure and vacuum. You
will also need a tachometer like 77060057 which also
features the Mopar "M" in the center.
For a complete listing of Mopar engine controllers
and other performance parts Click here.
















