Hey - my 1st post - found a lot of valuable info digging through the past posts on hear and using the search feature.
Thought I'd share my first experience trying an ECM repair this weekend - I just bought a used sidekick that wouldn't crank (so I got it cheap). From searches here it sounded like it might be the computer... and it was...
I pulled out my ECM - the computer - its located on a small shelf above the brake peddle (more over the fuse box on the left hand driver side)- you can take off the speaker panel to get to the front bolt and the back bolt you can loosen from underneath it. Its not the black box on the back - don't know what that is - its the metalic box you can see from behind the speaker panel.
Unplug the wire harness from the back and remove it - open the case up.
What makes the computer fail is a capacitor that will leak. On mine, I was able to see the fluid coming out of it.
I saw two different capacitors - a 100 micro farad and a 50 micro farad. I cleaned up the leaky fluid and noticed that it had burnt through a "trace" - the copper outline wiring thats on the circuit board. I took the computer - still open - into Radio Shack and litteraly said "hey dude, you got any of these things?" and the guy looked it up (the one leaking on mine was the 100 micro farad capacitor) - and the Radio Shack guy said yep - they had a filing cabinet thing towards the back with capacitors in it. I found the 100 mic capacitor (cost a $1.50) and bought a 5 dollar soldering iron kit. Went home, and tried my hand at soldering... which I didn't think I could do - but it wasn't really that hard when I started playing with it... just took about 20 minutes of fooling with it.
Heated up the soldering iron, put it on one end of the leaky capacitor - heated up the solder - worked it out of the board - did the same for the other leg of the leaky capacitor - pulling it all the way off. Then I used a pocket knife to scratch the "trace" that had burnt through by the leak - exposing a little copper on each side - and melted a ball of solder on the exposed copper on each side - then bent a little piece of solder over - and fused it so that it made a little bridge repairing the burnt trace. Then I cut the legs on the new 100 mic capacitor from Radio Shack to shorten it up some, and soldered it back in the holes from the old one.
Then I just put the case back on the computer box, went out, plugged in the harness - cranked her up - and it actually worked!! Cost me all of a $1.50 for the capacitor - and if it happens again I can fix it myself with a quick trip to Radio Shack. My guess is it will last a few more years until it starts to leak again and burns through a trace again... in the mean time I'm back on the road.
The one thing I'm not so sure about (so I'm going to get a bad ecm from somewhere cheap and fix it and carry it as a backup) - is the tempature rating on the Radio Shack capacitor. The one on the board was rated for a higher temp 105c and the Radio Shack one was rated for 85c - but they looked exactly alike. And since the higher temp rated one had failed - I thought maybe they just quit rating them that high and relabled them for lower temps or something. Anyway - it'll be interesting to see how long and in what kind of weather it lasts. I drove it all day Sunday and it was almost a 100 outside - no problems - of course it would take a while for it the fluid to eat through a trace again if it did start leaking... but what do I care it costs a $1.50 and only took 20 mins to fix - and if I start carrying a spare just in case

Now
If I could just figure out why I have to drive the transmission in first gear for about a mile in the mornings before it will start shifting (and then it works fine the rest of the day).