Well I got 2 similar TB for ~$40 total, both are from a G6 3.6L/LY7. They look very similar to the Nissan, but they are machined weird (offset inlet/outlet) and use GM's molded rubber o-ring to seal. They have a 72mm opening, and are probably the same Hitachi internals. THe prob is there's no adjustment screw, but I can deal with it. It may even work out better if my microcontroller works, as it won't corrode shut. For wires I plan on just soldering to the tabs the putting silicone on them.
The way I think these TB's work is the eletrical equivalent to injector tip-in, or a carb's accelerator pump. They give it 100% PWM, then once it reaches a certain throttle angle, they taper off the PWM so it holds position. Imagine keeping a balloon in the air by tapping it's bottom ocationally. The spring wants to pull the TB blade shut between the PWM signals, and the motor moves it back during the energy pulse. Just like how PWM of an LED makes it apear to get dim.
I want to try testing a slew of PWM frequencies (automated via microcontroller), otherwise I'll try voltage. I think PWM will be easy, since the motor is directly connected to the outside terminals (no internal circuitry). I'm planning something similar to an P&H injector driver. I'll make a microcontroller zap it open for a second (either at 12v or full PWM duty cycle), then hold it open with the lowest voltage or duty cycle possible. I could even use it's internal TPS to provide feedback.
Otherwise I'll just hook it to a cable and a servo. It's still bigger than my Ford TB (72mm vs 65mm), nearly as compact, and easier to make work than the Ford TB.