You might try this, it worked great on my 95.
95 Eliminating the TPS on Automatics
You need to get the following:
1)A 5K potentiometer, 1 watt rated. It should have three terminals on the back. I used a one turn pot, you can use a 10 turn if you want finer control.
2)6'-8' of 3 conductor 18 gauge shielded wire. The colors are red, black, and white. Don't use solid wire as it will tend to break easier. I couldn't find any of this so I used a red, black, and green 18 gauge automotive wire and made up a harness. The green was substituted for the white.
I mounted the pot in a small project box and secured this to the dash just to the right of the cargo light switch but you can put it any place you can get it to fit.
Run the wires from the TPS up to the dash. Cut the wires off the TPS leaving a few inches on the sensor. I used insulated push together connectors and on the end of the TPS installed the opposite type that were installed on the TPS wires. This allows the TPS to be easily reconnected should the need ever arise.
The Red wire will connect to the violet with white stripe, the white to the orange with dark blue stripe, and black to black. the violet is the 5V going to the TPS, the orange is the voltage that is leaving the TPS and the black is the ground.
Connect the white to the center connector on the pot and the black and red to the end connectors. If the pot works backwards, reverse the red and black leads. The black should be on the #1 connector and the red on the #3 if the leads are numbered on the pot you have. Seal the connections with dielectric grease to prevent corrosion.
After hooking up, set the voltage out of the pot to about 1 volt. On the pot I used, all the way off was at the 7 o'clock position and full on was at the 5 o'clock position. Setting the dial at 9 o'clock gave me one volt.