Sep-05-2013 10:50 PM
Jun-26-2014 06:41 PM
cncsparky wrote:Likely. My coach is front wheel drive, so there is a transfercase hanging off the back of the trans. When I had the trans built, I had them install a short shaft from a TH400 into the back of the 4L85e. The output shafts are interchangable. The bolt pattern on the back of both transmissions is identical. Where you need to get creative is the spacing. I machined a spacer between the trans and the transfercase because the back of the 4L85e is flat, where the TH400 is concave. This means the shaft sticks out farther on the 4L85e. Other than that, its pretty simple. So assuming the parking brake bolts on to the back of the trans (instead of a tail shaft housing) one should be able to just add a spacer and bolt on the brake.Daveinet wrote:
I think 2002 and later 2500. The 85 is rated for a higher load than the 4L80E.
Dave, do you have any info or a link to your swap? I'm looking into the same, but have not figured out how to handle the parking brake on the back of the tranny. Will the TH400 park brake bolt up to a 4L80/85E that had one from the factory?
Jun-26-2014 11:14 AM
Daveinet wrote:
I think 2002 and later 2500. The 85 is rated for a higher load than the 4L80E.
Jun-25-2014 03:11 PM
Jun-23-2014 09:06 PM
Daveinet wrote:JimFromJersey wrote:Sure there is. 4L85E. It's not that bad of a swap. The underside of a motorhome has a lot of space, so its ends up being pretty easy to more a trans mount. Shortening the driveshaft is pretty cheap. Trans controller is 6 bills and easy to set up as well. It is actually kind of nice to be able to custom tune your trans for your specific driving style. I have mine programed to up shift late, but then not downshift until I really get into the throttle. It keeps the TC locked up most of the time, unless I really need it to downshift.
The vac gauge does let you know when the engine is performing 'efficiently', but it's somewhat disheartening to see the tach floating around 3000 rpm at 55-60 mph. I guess there's just not much we TH-400 owners can do...
Jun-23-2014 08:41 PM
JimFromJersey wrote:Sure there is. 4L85E. It's not that bad of a swap. The underside of a motorhome has a lot of space, so its ends up being pretty easy to more a trans mount. Shortening the driveshaft is pretty cheap. Trans controller is 6 bills and easy to set up as well. It is actually kind of nice to be able to custom tune your trans for your specific driving style. I have mine programed to up shift late, but then not downshift until I really get into the throttle. It keeps the TC locked up most of the time, unless I really need it to downshift.
The vac gauge does let you know when the engine is performing 'efficiently', but it's somewhat disheartening to see the tach floating around 3000 rpm at 55-60 mph. I guess there's just not much we TH-400 owners can do...
Jun-23-2014 07:44 PM
JimFromJersey wrote:
Doc & TurboJ, one of the POs of my Bounder installed a Vac gauge and a tach to the left side of the dash gauge cluster. It looks like a pretty simple job.
The vac gauge does let you know when the engine is performing 'efficiently', but it's somewhat disheartening to see the tach floating around 3000 rpm at 55-60 mph. I guess there's just not much we TH-400 owners can do...
Jun-23-2014 07:14 PM
Jun-22-2014 04:02 PM
Jun-21-2014 05:02 AM
Jun-20-2014 07:53 PM
Jun-13-2014 09:53 AM
Jun-13-2014 09:52 AM
Jun-12-2014 12:00 PM
Daveinet wrote:Interesting, mine is a 1995 33 ft 11 ft 6 in high and weighs about 15,000 fully loaded. I did not think the weight would be that much difference. 8000 lbs is a lot of weight increase, but I guess when you look at the whetted surface area increase of the newer, higher, wider mh's plus slides the weight adds up quickly and it is still HP to weight that affect performance and mpg's.
I'm almost 32 feet. Weight is 13580 fully loaded.Gjac wrote:They are significantly more efficient, its just that they are installed in units that are much taller and about 8K lbs heavier. Most the old 454 are running in coaches that are 16K lbs on lower profile chassis. The 6 speed does not help mileage, but just optimizes engine speed for best use of available power. In high gear, the engine RPM is still nearly the same, regardless of if you have a 4 speed or a 6 speed. The difference is that when you ask for more power, it will shift sooner, so the engine is turning the optimum RPM for the needed power. You also have a lower first gear.
I am surprised also that the newer 8.1's and V-10's don't do better than the older motors. Most seem to report 7-7.5 mpgs on on the newer MH's with 5 & 6 speed transmissions, while 8-8.5 mpg seems to be the norm for a 454 TBI with a 4 speed transmission for the same length MH. Maybe more HP uses more fuel? Weight of stuff inside more slide outs?
Jun-11-2014 03:59 PM
Gjac wrote:They are significantly more efficient, its just that they are installed in units that are much taller and about 8K lbs heavier. Most the old 454 are running in coaches that are 16K lbs on lower profile chassis. The 6 speed does not help mileage, but just optimizes engine speed for best use of available power. In high gear, the engine RPM is still nearly the same, regardless of if you have a 4 speed or a 6 speed. The difference is that when you ask for more power, it will shift sooner, so the engine is turning the optimum RPM for the needed power. You also have a lower first gear.
I am surprised also that the newer 8.1's and V-10's don't do better than the older motors. Most seem to report 7-7.5 mpgs on on the newer MH's with 5 & 6 speed transmissions, while 8-8.5 mpg seems to be the norm for a 454 TBI with a 4 speed transmission for the same length MH. Maybe more HP uses more fuel? Weight of stuff inside more slide outs?