This past week I kind of unraveled thinking about this problem. I was really worried that I wouldn't get the engine running on this ECU, and then I'd be forced into the manual swap and ECU tuning, and then I'd blow the Challenge budget and then what would be the point of this car? I toyed with the idea of letting it go over budget and still bringing it to the Challenge, but that really bummed me out because I've made so many compromises and decisions up to now in order to keep it under $2k, so I feel like I'd have to go back on those and do it over again. Eventually I decided hell or high water this will be a $2000 car and I'll find a way to make that work.
To hedge my bets, I am pursuing both "Plan A" (find a new key+transponder) and "Plan B" (get my ECU unlocked by Frankenstein Motorworks). I found an extra ECU at the junkyard and already shipped it out. $20 plus shipping to remove immobilizer (and therefore flash it to 2008 Highlander) is an awesome deal, but it's a gamble. I read a lot of wiring diagrams, the pinouts are the same, the trans is the same except final drive, so I think this will work, though no guarantee since I'm the first fool they've dealt with who is keeping an automatic. After all it is mostly the MR2 community who do the 2GR swap. I sent a junkyard ECU out for hacking for two reasons. One, in case I find a key and can get mine running. Two, they can only hack the ECU's that have a chip ending in "-AGD" inside. The Avalon came with a "-80", so it can't be tuned. So that's in the works.
In pursuit of "Plan A", I scoured the junkyards this morning. Remember, I need a matching key + immobilizer from the same car, preferably a 2005-2010 Avalon, but as a backup I was prepared to nab anything Toyota from the same era. I could not find a single key in the whole junkyard, and not even just Toyotas. Same at the other junkyard. It must be policy to not leave the keys out, or maybe someone steals them all, or these salvage cars just never had them in the first place. At least I have Plan B to fall back on, but if that doesn't work either I'd be frustrated. Just when I was down about not finding any keys, I passed a burgundy-colored sign that maybe everything will be okay.
That sign was a '99 Solara V6 5-speed. As in, the E153 5-speed transmission. The super rare one I need a bunch of parts from.
For reference on how rare this is, I checked Copart earlier this week for all possible V6 MT Camry/Solaras that could be donors, and there are only 4 in the whole country. There are only 2 of these trans on eBay, and they're from MR2's not Camrys. It goes into gear, the oil that drained out looked fine, so I went back home for my truck, more tools, and help from some friends.
We found it best to just sawzall the subframe so the trans splines would slide out then the whole thing drop straight down. They charged me $100 ($75 for trans, $25 core), including the ultra-rare 1MZ flywheel and clutch, which they even marked with paint pen so I guess it's part of the transmission. I had to pay extra for the starter though. Worth it in case the Avalon one doesn't line up. So now I have 2 different $100 Solara E153 5-speeds. But more importantly I have the flywheel (which I have only seen as cheap as $200) and the clutch release arm (another $100 or so). And a backup trans in case one is bad. My odds are feeling better again. This drastically changes the $2000 budget strategy.
I would still like to get the engine running as-is with the automatic, just to see if it works with the hacked ECU. I won't let the manual transmission score slow me down, since I can swap that in anytime. In the meantime I am pluggin away at cooling system and pruning the harness down to the bare minimum. But yeah I'm pretty excited about this project again.