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While I agree on the early TCC lock-on-demand, those K-factors do not take into account the difference in production and availability of lo-rpm btu output of a Diesel engine vs those other engines - when the fuel is trucked in with the intake air charge, low-rpm output is only a hoped-for dream - add fuel (increase fuel\air ratio) to get black smoke and flooding - but, allow those engines to rev with an appropriately-mated (read: slush) TC and the air flow increases to which added fuel begins producing power - slush is good for rpm-power engines
Oth, a Diesel engine pumps it's designed full displacement of air in each 4-stroke cycle - run it horribly 'lean' and it merely idles - add fuel to suit at nearly any rpm off-idle and BTU output begins to increase way beyond those other engines - load it at lo-rpm and BTU's increase drastically - add a magic Bar-increaser, dump even more fuel and exhaust gas flo increases even more drastically, eg-temps increase drastically, to which increased exhaust energy the Bar-increaser responds merrily, and you get max torque in the range of 1500-1700rpm - add a slush-verter that won't allow full hydraulic coupling until 2200rpm, and you're wasting a lot of fuel, merely converting that power into hydraulic-fluid therms - a turbo-charged Diesel engine needs lo-stall to work the turbo - lookit how much faster an auto-trans Diesel leaves the line vs an identical manual-trans version which cannot get equiv turbo spool-up with unloaded rpm - yeah, you can lock the brakes with one foot, load-up and slip the clutch with the other foot, mash the loud pedal with the remaining foot to get rapid spool but with burned clutch disk, pressure plate and flywheel - scary
While n\a Diesels like a little slush, use that same transmission with it's oem-spec'ed TC on the turboDiesel version in the same chassis and the stall magically increases by ~400rpm, not even good for efficiency and economy
The most significant improvment everyone notices with the Suncoast Hemi-verter is the increased lo-end response, well B4 the TCC locks, ruling out the advertised racing upgrades to the clutch - that improvement is resulted from the lo-stall properties of the oem hemi-verter, nothing more - torque multiplication is still 2.1:1, decreasing as turbine speed approaches impeller speed, usually 1:1 at some point between 2nd and 3rd gears, yet the improvement is readily obvious to that most universal of critics, the ole buns-dyno - slush is bad for turboDiesels
There is a ray of hope for the other camp, as the newer d.i. gasoline engines such as which powers the Saturn\Pontiac roadster do better at lo-rpm torque in a light chassis, but not nearly as well as Diesels because they still need rpm and a throttle plate to maintain stoke at any rpm
_________________ '05 CRD Limited Pricol EGT, Boost GDE Hot '11; EDGE Trail switched SEGR; Provent; Magnaflow; Suncoast T\C, Transgo Tow'n'Go switch; Cummins LP module, Fleetguard filter, Filterminder 2.5" Daystar f, OME r; Ranchos; K80767's, Al's lifted uppers Rubicons, 2.55 Goodyears Four in a row really makes it go
Last edited by gmctd on Sun Jul 26, 2009 1:49 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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