Torque Converters? lock up or non lockup?? Single disc or Multi Disc??

Highroller

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Oct 18, 2002
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I have questions regarding this... My Mods are listed in my Signature.. my question goes as follows.

I know I want a Precision Industries converter.. I know I want a 3200 Stall Speed... I don't know the rest.. Locking, or non-locking.. multi discs or single

Please if anyone has bought one or knows about them, help me answer this question...

What converter (part # or model #) should I buy? My car sees alot of track time but I do drive it to work everyday...
 
I just went through this same issue with my 68. I'm getting a non lock up 2,500 stall for it to go along with my new AOD conversion. Here's why -
Lock up has a 2 piece input shaft which is weaker than a non-lock up that has a one piece input shaft (meaning it wont hold as much power, and / or as long). The lock up will swicth to the second input shaft in OD which will stop it from slipping to stall speed. When it does so it takes off pieces of material that end up in your fluid that can cause damage. However you'll get better gas mileage with a lock up though. I'm not sure how much better. Everyon I talke dto said do the non-lock up unless you do a ton of highway driving, and need the gas mileage. Not sure if all this applies to a 4.6 w/ am AOD-E. My 68 is a 302 with a AOD. My looser LS1 friend has a 3,500 stall in his auto. Pretty fun to ride in ! I'm not that worried about the gas mileage for my 68 even though I'll drive it on the highway the stall speed in OD is supposedly helpfull too, and I want my stuff to last, and not break ! :nice:
 
I don't care about my gas milage as much as I care about performance.. I want to see .4 ths off my 1/4 mile since I will be paying close to 1k to get this thing bought, installed and re-tuned

so to the people that has bought em.. which did you get and why?? Do you regret your choic? Did you send it back for a internal change.. ie stall speed increase??
 
Jim

what does locking up the converter actually do.. and when do you lock it up?? thanks for everything guys..

Im just paranoid before I shell out all this cash...

I guess I am interested in the lock up schedule that I should generally use for my car!!
 
Highroller said:
Jim

what does locking up the converter actually do.. and when do you lock it up?? thanks for everything guys..

Im just paranoid before I shell out all this cash...

I guess I am interested in the lock up schedule that I should generally use for my car!!
I can't answer that in technical terms, but in layman's terms, it creates a hard lock of the transmission input to the output so there is no slip. This eliminates the approximate 7 percent slip you get with a non-locking torque converter and improves your gas mileage. Normally the converter only locks up in highway cruise, I believe. With my manual valve body and converter toggle switch, on the drag strip, I can lock up in any gear I want and pick up a few 10ths.
 
A locking converter also reduces your tranny temps because there's no slippage when it's locked-up. When driving very easy with the stock lock-up schedule, you should feel it lock at 25 mph (in 3rd gear) ... not just when you're on the highway. When you lay into your car hard it unlocks then locks-up again when you ease off the throttle or around 90 mph or so if you stay on it hard ... I forget the exact speed, but 90 is close from what I recall. I can't tell you which one is best, but I would definately go with a lock-up converter.