Choosing a stall converter

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(Flash stall)
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===Flash stall===
 
===Flash stall===
  
Formatting is not okay when it changes the meanings of the person creating the material.
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Let's start with the "stall". Drive your car to a deserted road, stop, watch the tach, and stand on the gas very abruptly.  
I majored in English in college, but choose to dis-regard some aspects for the sake of expression. It's called artistic license, often necessary to better convey a message. Thus I'm deleting the remainder. If you want the benefits of my experiences, then stop changing my meanings.
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Assuming everything is functioning normally, the tach will jump, to at least 1200 RPM, before the car actually
I can restore my original content, if you apologize and publicly promise to never again change my meanings.
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begins to jump forward. Or the tires go up in smoke, depending on your combo.
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That is your "flash stall".
  
 
===Brake stall===
 
===Brake stall===
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Now, repeat, but this time keep your left foot on the brake pedal, hard. But don't do it for more than a couple of seconds to avoid over heating the converter and transmission. Then do a gentle drive afterward to cool down the parts. That was your "foot-brake stall" unless there was tire spin.
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You can find all sort of descriptions and explanations, but your first interest is in what your stall does for your  car.
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Converter stall speed needs mostly center on your camshaft, heads, compression, gearing, and expectations. Tuning and fuel quality are your responsibility. For this  we must assume you got the tune right and run enough octane.
  
 
=Examples of different applications=
 
=Examples of different applications=
  
=Choosing a Stall Converter=
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Details of  5 different combinations:
  
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*Combination 1: 1979 Firebird. 150-HP 301 with a slightly leaky Q-Jet hurting MPG but not driveability, backed by a T-350, a 2.73:1 axle, and on new Firestone 215/75R15 tires.
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The converter was an 1800-stall. I could, occasionally, chirp a tire from a dead stop. But i soon got curious about the converter slippage: Cruising along at 55 MPH, lift off the throttle, the RPM instantly dropped 200 RPM. Ease back into it, it came back up by 200 RPM. In later years, I came to learn that this is typical of most stock GM converters, though I doubted, and still doubt, that that converter was stock.
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But then I tried it the other way: stomping the gas, RPM climbed another 200 RPM. Did that mean a total of 400 RPM of slippage?  Yes, a total slip at WOT of 400 RPM.
  
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Lesson learned: normal slip of torque converters. Also applies to lockup style when not locked.
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*Combination 2: 1978 Camaro LG3 ( 145-HP 305 ) TH350, swapped stock 1200-stall for B&M TorkMaster 2000 converter, 3.08:1
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axle, 235/70R15 tires. This converter was stock, it was 1200 RPM flash stall.
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A change to a  B&M converter gave my combo a 1700 RPM flash stall. It felt like I had swapped to a 350, when launching. And by launching, I mean flooring the gas the instant the light went from red to green. It pushed me into the seat noticeably more, and I loved it.  But I was in for another surprise. I finally stopped playing in traffic and got on the highway. I was so stunned to discover my slippage wasn't 200 RPM. It was just 50 RPM! So I stomped the go pedal, the RPM shot up by another 350, for a total of 400. After all, my previous 1978 / LG3 / TH350 / 1200 / 2.41:1
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/ 205-75R14 Camaro did 23 MPG with a best of 26.
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*Combination 3 : A 1965 Mustang. It had an 8.3:1 302 with Roush 200 heads, a Comp Magnum 292 cam, headers,
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intake, carb, 3500-stall, C4, 3.80:1 spool. Tires were 25" diameter.
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That thing needed 10.5:1 compression, but a full summer of tuning got it driveable. To the point that he swapped
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street radials for drag tires. Then we went out to the exact center of nowhere, did up the 5-point race harnesses,
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and he let it fly.
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If you've ever felt a jet plane on takeoff, this puts them all to shame. Nothing you've ever experienced at any
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amusement park even comes close, either. This was like God's own pillow-covered sledgehammer to the heiney.
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First experiences are always more vivid than follow-ups, and that's the case here.
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*Combination 4: A 1985 Camaro with a mildly modified L69, 700R-4, 3.42:1, and sticky 215/60R15s. I decided on a B&M TorkMaster 2400. It drove pretty stock, until I swapped the heads. No traction in first gear, very very fun!
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*Combination 5: A 1995 Camaro Z28 convertible with the LT1, 4L60E, 2.73:1, and 235/55R16s.  My flash stall was now 2400, twin black stripes became effortless, from a rolling 5 MPH start, and even starting with the 4-wheel-disc-brakes applied enough to keep the car stopped, getting both tires
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turning took like half throttle.
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But the driveability? It was hell. My slippage was always 1200, maybe because someone or something had caused it
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to fall off a workbench some weeks prior. But no denting was found. Still, lockup no longer worked. I replaced the trans, and still no lockup.
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Great converter for playing, needs some rear gear.
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=Choosing a Stall Converter=
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If you're studying the COMP Cams catalog, for example, you'll note that once you look past the smallest cams, they begin noting stall speeds. But as with all things camshaft, these are for the popular engine. 
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If you're gonna pick a cam for a lesser-displacement version, read the notes for the next larger cam.
 
   
 
   
 
===Racing converter application===
 
===Racing converter application===
  
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For racing, you want a stall about 500 RPM below the RPM at which your engine makes peak torque. For most mild
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SBC 350s, torque peak is typically 3500 RPM. With Vortec heads and such, 4000 is more like it. AFR heads should
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raise that to 4500.
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Choosing converters is also about size. Stock SBC converters are about 300 MM, which is nearly 12". They're
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referring to the outer diameter of the whole converter.
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Why it matters?
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My TM2400, above, was a loose 12". That looseness is most of why it was able to slip 1200 RPM all the time. Had it been a tight 10.5", still 2400 flash stall, it would have been much less slip, and much less irritating.
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Loose converters are great when your static compression is way low, or way high. Way high, a loose converter helps
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reduce detonation. Way low, it covers the soggy off-idle. And a cam that's way too big is the same soggy feel as
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way low compression.
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Efficiency: This is difficult to discuss.  The TM2k was much more efficient than
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the stock converter it replaced, and was also more efficient than what was in my 1979 Firebird.
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But how to tell, the reduced slip at cruise? Partly.  That it had that plus the better launch? Mostly.
  
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Are all converters rated by the same standards? NO!
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Watch some vids on You-Tube where guys have recorded their gauges while driving around. I watched mostly LS1 F-car
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guys' vids, but that's enough to illustrate the point. Yes, their results are combination-dependant, but I watched
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a 4000-stall drive tighter than  my 2400 stall. And at 4000 stall, it's not just the smaller diameter.
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===Fuel Mileage===
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Gas mileage: A 2400 RPM stall most definitely will hurt  MPG, in town and on the highway. But would that 2000 have helped the 1978 in town, had  the carb been repaired ?
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It's not as simple as less stall = more MPG.
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Engines can lug to the point it's un-mistakeable, but like detonation, there are lesser levels where the driver really can't tell. And if your converter is too tight, it will hurt your MPG.
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Performance: Is it all in the launch? Nope. The instant after an upshift is called the shift recovery.  With an automatic, how much the RPM drops from the upshift isn't controlled by gear ratios alone. The converter and it's effect on performance after the upshift is more pronounced with a wide-ratio 700R-4
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than with a close-ratio TH350. With the TH350, the launch is what the converter helps most.
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But with more gear, you need more stall.
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Torque converters are much more sensitive to load than to engine torque.
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More gear reduces the load that the converter feels. Same with taking weight out of the car. But not only that, having more gear also takes load off the transmission.
  
 
===Gear ratio===
 
===Gear ratio===
  
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The first mod in the drivetrain should be making sure you're not running a 2.73:1 axle ratio with 26" tires. With taller tires, a bit more than 2.73 gear ratio.
  
  
 
[[Category:Transmission]]
 
[[Category:Transmission]]
 
[[Category:Undeveloped articles]]
 
[[Category:Undeveloped articles]]

Revision as of 11:56, 1 January 2012

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