Not directly. The CPS signal goes into the ECU. Then the ECU spits out 2 pulses per revolution (1 pulse per 180 degrees) to the cluster. So, the ECU is feeding junk signals to the cluster for some reason. Either the ECU is bad, or it is getting a bad CPS signal, both of which seem unlikely based on what the OP has replaced. I am still thinking that no chip or a bad chip is installed in the ECU case. All maps AND program executable code are on the chip, so if it is missing or bad, things are not going to work right.
Was the ECU swapped with a new one, or a used known-working one? A new one might not have a chip in it, and if it was used, maybe the previous owner pulled out the chip beforehand?
Was the ECU swapped with a new one, or a used known-working one? A new one might not have a chip in it, and if it was used, maybe the previous owner pulled out the chip beforehand?





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