Saturday, May 25, 2024 at 10:28
Tonysmc
There is , to me a few anomalies in the reply.
First up, most people DO NOT REALIZE, the temp recorded and displayed via a scan gauge is ONLY the temp RETURNING TO THE AUTO, and definitely NOT the temp of the much hotter fluid leaving actually leaving the torque converter. If the pan/sensor temp said 150C that is AFTER it has been cooled by some means. Therefore the fluid will have been fairly COOKED and likely to turn a different colour. If that happens it also begins to lose it's lube ability and frictional qualities for clutches.
With a lock up mod you don't ever know IF and WHEN the poor little clutch is slipping and cooking itself. THEREFORE, Don't look at the road, ALWAYS/CONSTANTLY LOOK AT REVS to try and detect TC Lock clutch SLIP. Good luck!
That said, the enormous heating of the fluid is trying to be cooled by, a conventional heat exchanger if not prior cooler is there to get rid of heat by using the highest differential of temp levels, oil to air, to maximize the best rate of heat dissipation.
Under towing conditions greater heat is generated if TC normal slippage is happening. Engine KW's go into heating the fluid through "work" done on the fluid.. All entirely normal. What people are trying to achieve is: using a lockup clutch to cancel out that heat value, BUT it is operating under conditions where the clutch cannot accept the torque loading and slips and heats, and burns, and is destroyed. That is why the manufacturer spent millions of $ testing and doing research and programming an ECU to detect the engine torque loading at any speed and disconnect the Lock UP clutch so it is still serviceable.
People towing in adverse conditions, without a trans cooler, are relying on the engine cooling system, WHICH MUST COOL THE ENGINE TOO, to dissipate ALL HEAT SOURCES
through the radiator water. If it becomes too much and engine is fried, then the auto is not any help to you. Cool it first to SAVE ENGINE.
Friends singing praises may not be technically minded and living on borrowed time. I wonder what tune it is?
Everything runs fairly close to failure, but if the threshold isn't exceeded then reliability happens.
Years ago, a VERY SMART person I know of, thought he could hold brakes and try and stall the converter in a 351 Fraud. System was already normal hot and about 20 seconds of full power and no motion, the TC simply cooked the fluid to rubbish. Rebuild!
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