Quote Originally Posted by Sabrewings View Post
Speed limiter is there based off your stock tire speed rating. Going to performance shift wouldn't magically swap tires on your car, so I highly doubt GM upped the overall speed limiter for performance shift. They may have extended some shift points, but I doubt your final limiter was lifted.
Very true.....the speed limiter is there as a lawsuit prevention tool by the car manufacturer. If your car came with H rated tires on it from the factory, your speed limiter will be set to under 130MPH. If you change tires to a V rated tire, it will still be under 130MPH unless you have a some type of PCM editing program/tool. Be very careful when editing your speed limiter. If you choose to increase it to say 255MPH, and you are runing H rated tires, and make some long runs at 135MPH, you do run the risk of the tires coming apart. You should never drive faster than the speed rating of your tires for any length of time.

Performance shift only effects the line pressure (firmer shifts) and the time between shifts (how fast it will shift). Anything else, such as:

Higher or lower RPM's at the shift point

Speed limiter increase or decrease (my teenager learned about this one. Hers is limited to 75MPH and I told her if she gets a ticket in town, I will lower it to 35MPH and she wont be able to take the interstate anywhere)

Higher or lower MPH at the shift point

And a whole slew of other things like Torque Management.

If your going to adjust this stuff, ALWAYS us a 400RPM buffer, meaning if you want the car to shift at 6000RPM, set your tune to 5600RPM. By the time the car gets the signal to shift (@5600RPM) and everything switches over you will be at 6000RPM.

2000 was the last year for STOCK performance shift by the way.

webracin