Good call on the idle tubes. I wouldn't use a dremel. The tubes are soft and you can almost twist the bit in your fingers to cut through them. Give them a shot of cleaner after drilling.
I hope that module change solved your issue. I will stand behind my recommendation of the genuine Ford replacement. They designed it and are still making a buck off selling their own, so why would they give the exact specs to aftermarket sellers? The Ford module is actually heavier than the others, so there must be something different about it. I think my Ford modules were about $47. But after dealing with that faulty new module from Standard and nearly being killed on the highway and embarrassed in front of my passengers I figured the extra $10 was worth it
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To add to the filter sock comment, I had the pickup become lodged with crap from the tank when I removed the filter sock once. Car would go fine on the flat, but when I started to put a load on the motor (start going up a hill) it would begin to cut out like you were flipping a switch. Sometimes it would keep going, sometimes it would stall and then start back up. Typically with a bad module, it'll just quit and won't re-start until the module cools down. It'll do that until it quits for good and never restarts.
The bum module I had ran great around town for a day, then as I was on the highway it would start to stumble and misfire out of no where. I thought it was a fuel issue but when I swapped a spare module in it cured it instantly.