20+ years of "Building 904/727 for drag racing use"

I wouldn’t say anyone is defending a transmission purely because of brand. But the 727 will handle a lot of power and as Duster346 has just gave conservative numbers of 1500hp for the 727 and 1000hp for the 904 cases. I’d consider 1000-1500hp a lot of power. So to say the 727 won’t handle power is false.

My example, my personally owned 727 came which out of a top sportsman car that ran 4.70s on nitrous, 2700lbs 1970 GTX tube chassis. The 727 was built by Rick Allison in 2006. I bought the 727 used off of a friend who bought the GTX and decided to change its setup. I put the 727 in my car which runs 5.50s-5.60s. Never tore it down before putting it in. Ran the trans 500 runs before I had converter fins start to fail and put metal through the trans. I tore it apart, for precautionary measures, and found nothing was harmed inside. The clutches and steels looked great, could still read the writing on them and I have no clue how long they were in there before I took it apart. I freshened the trans and back in the car it goes. Worked just as good as when I took it out. Not that I am laying down an overwhelming amount of power, but for running what my car runs, my 727 works well for me.


Trust me, I see your point about the TH400 having an advantage of the aftermarket case but for a Mopar naturally aspirated racer (which I believe most of us are) who wants to simply run 9s with an A body small block, the 727 or 904 will work just fine.

That’s what I’m saying. How much risk is worth it? Transmissions fail. Especially when pushed.

If someone made an SFI approved TF case I’d pick the TF over the TH all day long.

There is a saying in the street bike world. There are those who have gone down, and those who are going to go down. It’s the nature of it.

That’s why when I rode I had the best equipment I could afford. I’m risk averse.

I‘m the same with racing parts. I’ve broken enough of the best the aftermarket has to offer that I don’t usually try and push stock stuff if I can avoid it.