zombiekiller
warranties are 4 wussies
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2016
- Threads
- 6
- Messages
- 638
- Reaction score
- 319
- Location
- New Orleans
- First Name
- Dave
- Vehicle(s)
- 16 gt350, 66 galaxie,a Tesla, and an AMG G63
the point being, although airflow cooling logistics would be different at a higher speed ( maybe, based on the fact that air actually routes away from the trans due to the belly design) , that 70 mph at under 4,000rpm bumped the trans temp more than 40 degrees.He was also doing something most people wouldn't do for his test. I would like to know what the temperatures were running at 70 mph in 6th gear, which would be a more normal load.
I'd venture a guess that jamming at 160+ in the car in 6th gear for a semi-extended period of time on the autobahn would add heat faster and thus, more than likely, would quickly get you into what I'd consider a trans temp danger zone.
I get that the limp mode triggers between 276 and 280 degrees. The rate at which the tech and base trans heats, as well as the temps that it heats to, concern me.
It seems that even during nominal, every day driving, the temperate delta between the two different transmissions is REALLY big.
I'm not saying the sky is falling, or the car wont continue to operate. It is merely a data point.
I also have no clue as to if the trans temp stabilizes, or at what speed. It my minimal test, regardless of what I did, the trans temp steadily rose.
I tested it today again, with keeping an eye on the temp in 6th gear. the temp went to 194 degrees. so 5.7 degrees cooler.
again, posting this as a data point and nothing more. Am I hypothesizing about high speed runs and their impact on temp? absolutely.
Am i going to attempt jamming down the highway, higher than the posted speed limit for an extended period of time? abso-freaking-lutely not.
I also do not have access to any private stretch of asphalt where i could test sustained high speed. My local track requires lots of turning, braking, etc.
:cheers:
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