Forum Discussion
SidecarFlip
Jul 18, 2017Explorer III
transamz9 wrote:SidecarFlip wrote:
Always keep in mind that when an automatic trans up shifts or down shifts, thats is when the box makes the most heat.
It makes heat through hydraulic actuation and it makes heat as the clutch packs engage under heavy load and gear ratio selections are programmed to feel smooth. It's the smooth feel that makes the heat (and wear) because the clutch pack hydraulic pressure is modulated for smoothness. That slipping makes the heat.
While I don't have a GM, I manually downshift out of OD into direct prior to ascending a hill when the motor isn't producing a gob of power (Torque) and the clutch packs can engage with less residual heat. I run a shift kit as well and my shift kit increases the hydraulic pressure and how fast it rises, thereby clamping the packs quicker.... less heat
I might be wrong but you don't ever want your clutch packs to slip. You want your torque converter to do the slipping. That's what it's for.
Your clutch packs always slip to some degree as the internal ratio's change. They aren't an on-off switch. If they were, you'd rip your universals out or twist the drive shaft. The more they slip, the more heat produced and conversely, the smoother the shift is. How an automatic transmission works.
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