Nick Mailloux
Well-Known Member
I'm stealing this for my book of knowledge lol.
All my kits from transparts have had smooth clutches. The grooves on the clutchs may cause some surface area loss, but with the grooves any fluid between the clutchs can escape faster on lockup, this causes the initial clamp to be quicker and lessen the duration of the slip. Less heat overall.Those four frictions are probably grooved as well. You'll be losing about 25% strength by using four grooved instead of five smooth. I have actually measured and computed the friction surface area lost with grooves. But this is what they package; and act like this is the accepted practice for performance. Like I keep saying; there is no kit available; you have to buy separate components. Sometimes I'm sent thick or grooved Red Eagles for 904s and 727s. I send them back. OEM plates are thick and grooved because they can't take the heat otherwise. "High performance" kits should have five smooth thins with an extra steel in them.
It will be fine, just lube the drum! The lube on the seal will thaw quickly.Way ahead of you! I wrapped it with a rubber band and put it in the freezer. I just shouldn't have smeared the seal with trans gel before freezing it...
A lot of 68 cars have 67 parts in them. The pump is driven off the drive hub and not the input shaft. One would think you'd still have more pressure than you did even with the input shaft not spinning. Tflite patty(Pat Blais) is in my state, he's legendary among tflite builders here and is great to work with.Found the problem and it's not in the valvebody. Turns out my trans has a 18 spline input, and I ordered a 27 spline converter (which it's supposed to have). So either someone used early parts to rebuild this trans in the past, or I have an early built car using leftover '67 parts. I also noticed when installing the shift kit that it was missing some elements in the valvebody that were listed as being 68 and later.
So some quick searching has shown that there are not many options for 18 spline converters. Tflite patty on ebay has a high stall reman, and I would also need his spacer to get the small snout centered in my crank.
I could also flush my old converter, it shows almost no wear on the snout.
Last option is try and convert to the more common 27 spline. I'm not sure how much parts that would require.
Ok perfect! Glad to know you got a good reading.I tested again before pulling it. It had pressure in all forward gears. Turns out thats the only time pressure is available in the "line pressure" tap.
Chrysler A727, A904 Pressure Ports
I have them hold on a sec.Reinstalling the stock converter fixed the problem. Factory drain plug allowed me to flush out the clutch deposits. The shifts don't seem that much firmer, but I was not able to really get on it as I was just cruising around on Memphis side streets. Don't really want to go wide open from a standstill either. I want the 7 1/4 to survive until the 8.8 is built. I would be interested in comparing the mods done on a Tf2 kit, but I haven't seen the instructions posted anywhere.
Reinstalling the stock converter fixed the problem. Factory drain plug allowed me to flush out the clutch deposits. The shifts don't seem that much firmer, but I was not able to really get on it as I was just cruising around on Memphis side streets. Don't really want to go wide open from a standstill either. I want the 7 1/4 to survive until the 8.8 is built. I would be interested in comparing the mods done on a Tf2 kit, but I haven't seen the instructions posted anywhere.