Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Ok, thought i would start a discussion on the auto trans, get a good discussion going.

Some discussion points, of which some are questions from me are

- What power is the box good for

- What upgrades can i do, apart from valve body?

- Torque converter, whats the deal? Replacing it and so on (i want to replace mine)

- Stall converter kit? Does anything exist?

- Is there any addon where i can give my car tiptronic style gear changes on my S1? Basically make it a clutchless manual style thing?

Anyone that can answer, cheers.

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/102861-automatic-trans-thread/
Share on other sites

Ok, thought i would start a discussion on the auto trans, get a good discussion going.

Some discussion points, of which some are questions from me are

- What power is the box good for

- What upgrades can i do, apart from valve body?

- Torque converter, whats the deal? Replacing it and so on (i want to replace mine)

- Stall converter kit? Does anything exist?

- Is there any addon where i can give my car tiptronic style gear changes on my S1? Basically make it a clutchless manual style thing?

Anyone that can answer, cheers.

so u have made up your mind or still deciding? (auto vs manual that is) :)

Well, ive made my mind up.

The reasons i am keeping the auto is

- I want to tow things, with the clutch i would want it wouldnt be fun!

- 7k can be spent on other mods, which i CAN remove when selling the car. Meaning i wont loose THAT much money. Meaning i get other mods sooner too.

- The money i save on the conversion, i can put towards importing something like a 7k non regoed, non complied race/drift silvia/GTST.

If i can build the auto to be quick shifting, responsive, tough, hard launching and if i can somehow get it to work tiptronically style, that would be best. All i really hate about the auto is f**king kick down.... but ill deal with it.

Many people have two cars, i am sure i can do that too...

2 cars & a bike, absolute bliss. *wink*

Yeah, I too would like to 'convert' to tiptronic style. Dont know how or if it could be done, 1st thing though will be to do the actuator valve body exchange and add a big oil cooler kit.

What do torque converters do, and are they worthwhile for a 200awkw auto Stagea thats primarily a family car?

I am far from an auto box expert, I leave that to the profesionals. The following assumes some level of knowledge of how an automativc geabox works. If you don't know, then this is the best thread I have seen for a while, please read it first;

http://www.ukcar.com/features/tech/gearbox/AUTO/

The auto in a Stagea is made by Jatco, and is basically the same as Z32 and R33GTST (+ a 4wd transfer case bolted on the side) and several other larger 6 cylinder Nissans, 4wd's, utes, trucks etc. So parts and knowledge are not hard to find.

If you need higher rpm for launch (so you have boost) then a high stall speed torque converter is the answer. You pick the stall rpm to suite the boost build characteristics of the turbo. The standard torque converter has around a 2,000 rpm stall speed, but as you increase the torque output from the engine the stall speed climbs a bit. At around 150 rwkw mine was at 2,250 rpm. Since you have the engine producing kinetic energy and the car going nowhere this energy has to be converted (Newtons Law, see, high school physics is sometimes usefull), in this case into heat. Think 60 or 70 of those 1 kw bar heaters, that's a lot of heat. That heat goes into the transmission fluid, hence the need for a big tranmission cooler.

An example, if you have turbo that produce boost at 3,500 rpm then you get a 3,500 rpm stall conveter. Bingo, boost at launch. The problem is (you get nothing for nothing) it is always a 3,500 rpm stall torque converter, so the car won't move until the engine is doing pretty much 3,500 rpm. That's bad for economy, emmisions etc

The Stagea auto uses a band for 2nd gear engagement, this can be upgraded with a stronger band (sometimes kevlar) which gives higher grip (to handle the extra torque) and tolerates more slip and heat.

The 3rd and 4th gears are engaged by clutches (wet clutches, like the ATTESSA), these can also be upgraded to handle the extra torque.

The bands and clutches are controlled by valves switching hydraulic pressure, so a "valve body" upgrade can be used to speed up the band/clutch engagement (sometimes called a "quick shift kit"). This lessens the wear on the bands/clutches and makes the gear change quicker/sharper. As usual you get nothing for nothing, this means slightly harsher gearchanges, not as seamless, less smoooooth. Good oil temperature control is necessary for tight gearchanges, hence the need for a big transmission cooler.

How much does it cost? Well the full upgrade (torque converter, bands, clutches and valve body) seems to be around $3,500 (excluding gearbox R&R). The first step is a big tranmission cooler (~$200), then a valve body upgrade (~$300), then its inside the gearbox time.

How much power will it handle? Damn tuff to answer as the weight of the car and its traction (Stagea = 4wd and 1700 kgs) has some bearing. It will most certainly handle as much as the standard engine internals are capable of supporting (ie; ~300 rwkw).

That's about the limit of my research so far, hope it was of some help. MV Automatics in Adelaide seem to be the Skyline auto experts. There was a valve body exchange arranged on the Group Buy section a while ago with them.

:) cheers :D

Edited by Sydneykid
  • Thanks 1

Yeah, thanks heaps SK, very VERY helpful info. MV Automatics charge around that $500 mark for supply only of valve body (exchange) & big oil cooler, or around $650 fitted for me (just up the road).

Now I understand a stall converter; so you dont move until it's 'stalled up' as such. Certainly not necessary for a family-type car, for me anyways.

With the valve body upgrade, Ive been told by SA forum members who use the product that the shifts are as harsh as how far your right foot is down on the throttle. City easy driving and its not too harsh, flat stick 6000rpm change and it'll bang up into the next gear......

Thanks very much for your input SydneyKid, appreciated.

Brendan

Has anyone got photos of the standard cooler vs upgraded?

I was interested in seeing the actual size difference.

It's not just size but the fluid flow though the cooler that's important.

TransCoolerComparisonSmall.jpg

I started a thread a year or so ago on transmission coolers, if you need to know

any more details this is the link;

http://www.skylinesaustralia.com/forums/in...showtopic=59399

:) cheers :)

  • 4 months later...

One other thing though Gary, what about the lock up clutch in the converter.... i was going to see how high Mike could make one and still keep the lock up part, so cruise and highway didnt suffer with excess slip. I really need one to help with the sprint racing.

Gary

for $3500 for the upgrade, it's coming on par with my current spending for manualisation. mine will roughly come to $4000 after install (not including powerfc and hiflo turbo)

so it doesn't really matter which avenue you take, but you get a superior results afterwards.

  • 2 years later...
  • 4 years later...
  • 2 years later...
  • 1 month later...

Sorry to drag up an old thread - I have searched honest!

Has anyone upgraded the belt and clutch packs? Anyone know of any decent suppliers of kevlar etc? Going to have the box out to fit a transgo kit so might as well get everything upgraded while its out.

Are the clutch packs different from different cars - I.e. would the ones from a patrol be any stronger, or are there aftermarket ones?

I'm not after mental power from the engine, would just rather do things once.

(S1 re4r01a)

Ta!

Mowgs

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • This sounds like a perfect excuse to install a Haltech R3.
    • I do believe from context he is talking about a S0/S1 R33 RB25 with associated ECU and Wiring for that, and a manual gearbox into a R34 N/A Auto. I don't have the knowledge of all the pinouts and such but my gut feeling from doing my own conversion is to use as much of the R33 stuff that you can. The "car" wiring is quite seperate from the "Engine" wiring when all things are considered. The only things to truly consider 99% of the time is the cluster, reverse lights and potentially disabling the 'not in P/N' immobilizer circuit.
    • A realistic expectattion of how long it has to last also comes down to.... when do you think you will be banned from registering and driving old petrol powered shitters? It's 27 years since that thing was built. It probably rusted out 15 years ago. It was probably repaired and looked OK for another 10. If you do a similarish bodge job now, or perhaps slightly better with some actual rust conversion and glassing, then.... get another 10-15 years out of it, after which you'll only be permitted by the CCP to drive electric cars manufactured in their Shenzen zone anyway. 
    • Let me assume that the concern over a manual ECU is that the NeoDET that you have was an auto and has an auto ECU. That ECU will not be a problem, but you WILL have to Nistune it. And you would have to Nistune it even if you had a manual ECU, because the turbo ECUs will shit the bed if they do not have all the things that they were told they have to have, to be happy. The big one being the TCS CU, which you won't have in your car. Anyway, with an auto ECU (which I have running my originally auto NeoDET in an R32) Nistune allows you to put in a Stagea image which doesn't panic about the absent TCS, and allows you to override a whle bunch of other annoyances that would otherwise see the check engine light on 100% of the time. Also, you can't wind up the power very far on the stock NeoDET ECUs without Nistune, because the boost sensor gets in the way. Nistune allows you to push that problem much further up the dial. Do you even have the boost sensor with the engine? Without it, you are SOL and will need an aftermarket ECU (or to find a sensor somewhere, god knows where). I can't tell you what the wiring loom differences are in a 34. But what Duncan said above needs to be considered. When you say "loom", does that include the transmission loom? Because you will need to swap out the auto tranny loom for the equivalent manual loom, and get rid of the neutral/park start interlock (basically hot wire it).
    • I have had the r3c in for years now, maybe close to 7 years and it has never missed a beat, anyone can drive it. Super easy to drive around town, the hotter it gets does get a little hard but it holds the power easy as 
×
×
  • Create New...