4 min read
Source: Magic MotorSport Official — June 25, 2026
Magic MotorSport has released Flex version 7.60.0.0, adding boot-mode unlocking support for the Continental GPEC5 ECU found in late-model Jeep, RAM, and Dodge vehicles — crucially, without requiring the RFT (Read From Trace) service that tuners have relied on for years.
The update eliminates the need to remove the ECU from the vehicle, ship it to a third-party service, and wait days for a bench read. For shops handling Jeep Wrangler 392, RAM 1500 TRX, and Dodge Durango SRT performance tuning, this cuts turnaround from a week to under an hour.
What the Flex v7.60.0.0 GPEC5 Update Actually Covers
Continental's GPEC5 (Gasoline Port Fuel Injection Engine Controller, 5th generation) is the ECU brain inside some of the most heavily tuned Stellantis platforms. Vehicles equipped with GPEC5 include the 2021–2025 Jeep Wrangler 392, 2021–2025 RAM 1500 TRX, 2022–2025 Jeep Grand Cherokee Trackhawk, and 2021–2025 Dodge Durango SRT Hellcat. These are high-value tuning candidates — and until now, extracting the factory calibration from a locked GPEC5 required an RFT service.
RFT, short for Read From Trace, is a bench procedure where a specialized lab physically probes the ECU's PCB traces to bypass security and read the flash contents. It works, but it costs $300–$500 per ECU, takes 3–7 business days, and leaves the vehicle dead in the bay while the ECU is out. Flex v7.60.0.0 changes the equation entirely: boot-mode unlock over the OBD-II port or via bench connection — no trace reading, no shipping, no multi-day wait.
The update also includes stability improvements for existing GPEC2A and MED17.X protocols, though the GPEC5 boot unlock is the headline feature. According to the release notes, the function is available immediately for all Flex users with an active subscription.
Why GPEC5 Boot Unlock Without RFT Matters for ECU Tuners
For independent tuning shops, RFT has been a persistent bottleneck. Sending an ECU out for a trace read isn't just expensive — it kills workflow momentum. A customer drops off a TRX for a stage 2 tune on Monday morning. By the time the ECU comes back from the RFT lab on Friday, the shop has lost four billable days on that lift. Multiply that across five performance vehicles a month, and the opportunity cost runs into the thousands.
Flex v7.60.0.0 turns that week-long process into a same-day job. The tuner connects the ECU tuning tool to the GPEC5 via bench harness or OBD-II, initiates boot mode, reads the factory calibration, modifies the maps, and writes the tuned file back. Total time: 30–60 minutes. No shipping label, no RFT invoice, no explaining to the customer why their truck is in pieces for a week.
There's also a competitive angle. ECU programming tools that support boot-mode unlock directly are becoming the differentiator between shops that can turn performance work profitably and those that can't. As Stellantis continues locking down its newer ECUs — GPEC6 is already in 2026 models — having a tool that handles GPEC5 without RFT is not just convenient. It's a business requirement for shops that specialize in American V8 tuning.
What This Means for Independent Shops in 2026
The GPEC5 update is part of a larger shift in the diagnostic tool market: bench-level ECU work is coming in-house. Five years ago, any locked ECU meant an automatic RFT ticket. Today, tools like Flex, KESS3, and PCMFlash are steadily eroding that dependency — one processor family at a time. GPEC5 support is a meaningful milestone because it covers some of the highest-volume performance ECUs currently on the road.
For shops evaluating whether to invest in an in-house ECU programming setup, the math has become straightforward. A Flex subscription costs roughly the equivalent of 4–6 RFT jobs per year. If a shop does even one GPEC5 vehicle per month, the tool pays for itself in under half a year — and that's before factoring in the revenue from faster turnaround and higher customer throughput.
There's an important caveat: boot-mode unlock is not the same as OBD-II virtual read. Bench connection is still required for GPEC5 — the ECU must be on the bench with the correct pinout harness. Shops will need a proper bench programming kit with the GPEC5-specific adapter. The time savings come from eliminating the RFT step, not from eliminating the bench entirely.
What to Watch Next
Magic MotorSport has signaled that GPEC6 boot support is in development, though no timeline has been announced. With 2026 Stellantis vehicles already shipping with the next-generation ECU, the window for GPEC5 is now — while these vehicles are still under warranty and owners are looking for first-round performance upgrades.
For shops that already own a Flex, the v7.60.0.0 update is available now through the standard update channel. For shops considering a first-time purchase, the GPEC5 unlock strengthens the case that Flex is keeping pace with the platforms that actually matter to American performance tuners.
Written by Roberto Vargas, ECU Tuning & Key Programming Specialist at vxdas.com
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