TDIwyse wrote:
Thanks for the data on the springs. According to this calculator (
http://www.engineersedge.com/calculator ... _k_pop.htm) going from .085 to .105 diameter wire should increase the big springs force holding capacity by about 230%. From my make-shift spring constant measurement setup of the old TC those original springs would bottom out at a torque pulse not much above 300 ft-lbs. So these new Euro TC springs should be able to hold up to some very large torque pulses now without the shock of metal-to-metal contact.
Do you have any data on the springs Suncoast is using? I'd be interested to see if they modified theirs as I wouldn't want what happened to some of these folks to happen to you.
viewtopic.php?f=5&t=41577&hilit=suncoastviewtopic.php?f=5&t=48092&p=537625&hilit=suncoast+shudder#p537625I've got no problems with people buying the Suncoast unit. I just hope people don't throwout the potential of the Euro TC without examining all the evidence.
P.S. I've also been giving the Euro TC a workout with the GDE turbo kit in lockup mode at full torque conditions. Not a hint of shudder or any evidence of inadequate clutch holding capability.
For me and what I want to do, I want the same service factor as the larger pickups that do towing with a SunCoast or other designed for Diesel Torque Converters. I have stated in previous posts that I will tow my trailer loaded as much as 7000 lbs through the rolling hills of the Midwest hauling my antique tractors. Frontal area will not be as much of a factor as a travel trailer, but the weight factor will be. I did not yet ask what spring configuration SunCoast uses, since they had the stock CRD dampener assemblies laying around, I suspect they must have something more heavy duty being used.
I put a lot of faith in Engineering, but what it boils down to is how sharp you want to sharpen your pencil and design to the edge. I have looked at detailed Finite Element Analysis reports at the same time I was looking at a $2,000,000 piece of equipment that performed beyond expectations, but had a broken shaft and destroyed its' self to the point it had to be scrapped. I have had some personal projects I engineered only to have a failure due to something I over looked or no one including myself was aware of.
Transmission companies like ZF in Germany sharpen their pencils to the point they are knocking the electrons off the atoms that make up the fiber molecules on the paper

. Compare the Chrysler Euro to a ZF products I have worked on in the past, the Chrysler Euro looks like an armor plated SUV. I am sure there may be a few who had Ford Power Stroke trucks with ZF manual transmissions who share the opinion I got owning and working on a BMW with a ZF Automatic Transmission. That experience along with many others soured me toward Bean Counter Engineering.
For me the stock CRD is just a good place to start. How close to the Edge (what is the service factor) is the Euro Converter designed, who knows, I don't, and don't want to find out on my own.