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The only "con" I can see is the availability of replacement parts. Not all may be carried by your local parts store. It just depends on what brand/type of distributor you are looking at. OEM is designed for reliability and "general" performance. The aftermarket distributors should have a more performance oriented control module, a better timing curve, etc. However, you can take a factory unit, drop in a performance module and an advance curve kit and have just as good a unit as most aftermarket distributors.
Trouble code P0606 means: Control Module Internal Performance Trouble code P0607 means: Control Module Performance
Yes; public performance licenses are available from distributors such as Swank.
High Energy Ignition (HEI) Module.
hei stands for high energy ignition and refers to the distributor. previous distributors used points and later distributors were controlled by the on-board computer.
A high performance car is one that has high horsepower for its size. For example, a large SUV has high horsepower but is not high performance because it is large, where a small BMW is high performance because it is compact and also has lots of horsepower.
High Performance Polymers was created in 1989.
High Performance, Delivered !!
Usually nothing. They usually both refer to replacing the vehicle's ECU. Buyer beware: Many "performance chips" are ripoffs.
The motto of Accenture is 'High performance, Delivered.'.
yes the rf 600f is a high performance sport bike
yes the rf600f is a high performance sport bike