@Wayne M. Not many medium duty transmissions around with that high of torque capacity.
Hopefully they did some misuse tests before sending out that transmission to customers.
For example the "idiot start" test, one of the harshest tests for the whole drivetrain.
From the OEMs the vehicle should withstand that 20x in a row.
Not 100% sure if this is what Ozzy is referring to but there is a torque stall capacity test that a
OEM clutch supplier has to pass in the vehicle as a part of the approval process.
Back about 94-95 I witnessed this test at the Sachs facility in Troy MI in the Jeep being tested. Roughly goes like this.
Parking brake locked.
Service brake applied.
Engine running, at temp.
Clutch pedal on floor, clutch released.
Select 4th (or one to one gear)
Accelerate engine to peak torque and hold RPM.
Now
simultaneously floor it and lift foot instantly off of clutch pedal.
The clutch must stall the engine. Don't have test criteria worksheet but the cycles were timed, data recorded and serious.
When it goes into runaway (slipping) under power smoke escapes from clutch housing and it STINKS!
IIRC Sachs test was 25X w/o engine runaway.
I saw a previous test clutch that didn't complete the cycle due to engine failure. The clutch was PURPLE from heat and trashed but intact. Next to it was a melted crank position sensor. It got so hot (gas engine located in bell housing triggered off of FW notches) the plastic melted, engine died prior to test completion. They had to repeat test with approval and a battery charger and 3' dia warehouse fan to provide enough cooling to complete the test.
The act of engaging the clutch (pedal coming UP) is the one time that YOUR L foot and R foot are purpously slipping the clutch and creating HEAT. Just motoring down the road, clutch sees ambient temp from engine etc. but it's not MAKING heat.
Heat = big consumer of clutch disc facings.
Gary