Originally posted by Strick-9
Cummins Corvette,
What attribute of a converter, more specifically the stator, dictates when torque multiplication is over?
Can that attribute be modified with a stock stator? Can it be modified more with a custom stator?
Why do you think an ATS converter won't stall? Maybe I shouldn't help you and you can knock ATS as well for your poor running engine. 
-Chris
The time at which the converter stops multiplying torque is when the vortex flow gives way to rotary flow. You want to end torque multiplication sooner? Take the stator out. It will never do it in the first place.
So to directly answer your question, the more "open" the stator is to fluid flow, the sooner it will enter rotary flow, and be done with torque multiplication. This is why the DTT stator has blades that are relatively thin compared to stock, to let more fluid through and make a tighter rotary flow power transfer. If you take the stator out, you are in rotary flow right off the bat, and have no torque multiplication and hate your converter bad because you can't get going. This will make the stall of the converter as low as it is going to get without modification to the turbine and/or pump.
Can it be modified with the stock stator? Yep. Remove the blades.
Can it be modified more with a custom stator? Nope.
As for the stalling, the tighter the converter is, the more it will ENHANCE the occurrence of stalls. I am not blaming the stalling on the DTT stuff, only saying that it made the problem much worse. And no, Piers couldn't (or else he didn't want to) fix it with an adjustment of the springs. He just bumped up the idle a bit, and that took care of it. An unwanted side affect of this was that the higher idle made the converter generate more heat when stopped in drive. So as long as I have a tight converter and a stalling problem, I must choose which I hate the least: the transmission getting hot quickly in traffic, or stalling all of the time.
Piers was right there, just finishing the adjustments to the truck, when I was complaining about the stalling problem. He just raised the idle until it stopped stalling when I blipped the throttle. When he was through, the idle in neutral was 950 rpm. So if you are saying that it is a problem with the adjustment of the springs, then I guess you are smarter or have more ambition than Piers.
If I get a converter that is looser at the bottom, then it will reduce the stalling problem, and it will make less heat when stopped in drive.
Any more questions?
Other Chris