Well... It's been interesting.
In my search for the perfect torque converter, I've found some interesting stuff...
TCI has one a number of people are happy with. However, thier tech line seemed a bit unhelpful, as the person really had no idea how different it was from stock. Price is very good (low).
www.tciauto.com
DTT is the perennial favorite of some and from my limited driving in DTT equipped trucks, a very fine one, too. However, it's quite spendy. DTT has a policy of not releasing a lot of technical data about their products. I have driven an 89% equipped truck, and found it very responsive, yet it allowed quite a bit of rpm before stall - very helpful for those who are stock or nearly so, while still improving things a lot. Price? Out of my league.
ATS has a pretty good converter, one they have taken great pains to make extra efficient, as per my research and conversations with Don and Clint, for the non-lockup 1st gens... But it's MORE $$$ than DTT's. Seems unlikely to be "worth it" for purposes of my search.
www.atsdiesel.com
Goerand makes a lower-stall, high-efficiency converter, but Dave talked me out of it. It's only more efficient with only a slightly lower stall than stock. Conversations with those who have them confirm it, as well. Thanks Dave, for your honesty! His price was good, as I recall. It would probably be a great alternative for those who don't tow, and want lively performance from un- or slightly modified vehicles.
Victoria Transmission has one they even show dyno charts for...
http://www.victrans.com/cummins.html
I called Victoria Transmissions, and they'd be happy to sell me one, but will NOT ship across the border into the US. I'd have to drive up or have someone over there bring it across for me. Estimated about the same as TCI, for price.
The likeliest candidate at the moment, however, is Hughes Performance.
THey are a company in Phoenix and they build thier own, in thier own factory, and the guy I talked to drives a BOMBed Ford that tows a big trailer. They have also built converters specifically made for diesels up to 500 HP.
They have a variety of options, from the extreme low stall to their "towing" converter - and they are very familiar with DTT's, BD's, ATS's, and even TCI's converter (the guy I talked to would not comment on TCI... probably not a good thing for TCI ), and said they could build anything custom like any of them make, but probably could make one from on-the-shelf parts that would make precisely what I want, starting at a price equal to the best I found for the TCI converter.
www.hughesperformance.com
I'm probably getting an XFM variant.
http://www.hughesperformance.com/xtm.html
It will have a lower stall than stock (quite a bit, probably 300 rpm), higher torque multiplication, and higher efficiency than stock, as well. It is designed for a 1. 9:1 torque multiplication, which I am guessing is similar to what ATS and other good converters achieve. They will CUSTOM BUILD this converter - made to order - and will take a little over a week to get, once ordered.
Just thought I'd detail the process I went through when shopping for my converter... And perhaps add a source or two you might not have heard of before for you to do your own shopping.
In my search for the perfect torque converter, I've found some interesting stuff...
TCI has one a number of people are happy with. However, thier tech line seemed a bit unhelpful, as the person really had no idea how different it was from stock. Price is very good (low).
www.tciauto.com
DTT is the perennial favorite of some and from my limited driving in DTT equipped trucks, a very fine one, too. However, it's quite spendy. DTT has a policy of not releasing a lot of technical data about their products. I have driven an 89% equipped truck, and found it very responsive, yet it allowed quite a bit of rpm before stall - very helpful for those who are stock or nearly so, while still improving things a lot. Price? Out of my league.
ATS has a pretty good converter, one they have taken great pains to make extra efficient, as per my research and conversations with Don and Clint, for the non-lockup 1st gens... But it's MORE $$$ than DTT's. Seems unlikely to be "worth it" for purposes of my search.
www.atsdiesel.com
Goerand makes a lower-stall, high-efficiency converter, but Dave talked me out of it. It's only more efficient with only a slightly lower stall than stock. Conversations with those who have them confirm it, as well. Thanks Dave, for your honesty! His price was good, as I recall. It would probably be a great alternative for those who don't tow, and want lively performance from un- or slightly modified vehicles.
Victoria Transmission has one they even show dyno charts for...
http://www.victrans.com/cummins.html
I called Victoria Transmissions, and they'd be happy to sell me one, but will NOT ship across the border into the US. I'd have to drive up or have someone over there bring it across for me. Estimated about the same as TCI, for price.
The likeliest candidate at the moment, however, is Hughes Performance.
THey are a company in Phoenix and they build thier own, in thier own factory, and the guy I talked to drives a BOMBed Ford that tows a big trailer. They have also built converters specifically made for diesels up to 500 HP.
They have a variety of options, from the extreme low stall to their "towing" converter - and they are very familiar with DTT's, BD's, ATS's, and even TCI's converter (the guy I talked to would not comment on TCI... probably not a good thing for TCI ), and said they could build anything custom like any of them make, but probably could make one from on-the-shelf parts that would make precisely what I want, starting at a price equal to the best I found for the TCI converter.
www.hughesperformance.com
I'm probably getting an XFM variant.
http://www.hughesperformance.com/xtm.html
It will have a lower stall than stock (quite a bit, probably 300 rpm), higher torque multiplication, and higher efficiency than stock, as well. It is designed for a 1. 9:1 torque multiplication, which I am guessing is similar to what ATS and other good converters achieve. They will CUSTOM BUILD this converter - made to order - and will take a little over a week to get, once ordered.
Just thought I'd detail the process I went through when shopping for my converter... And perhaps add a source or two you might not have heard of before for you to do your own shopping.