Corb@CorbinShipping
New member
Lol smooshie very technical term
powered by this (╯°□°)╯
I looked that one up... It's in the manual... LOL
Lol smooshie very technical term
powered by this (╯°□°)╯
Lol smooshie very technical term
powered by this (╯°□°)╯
It's similar to your cheeks lol
Gotta remember replacing clutches every year or two is always better than breaking shafts, converters, or gears... My little truck runs pretty soft shifting for this reason
There isn't anything stupid built into the F-450 chassis that's accounting for variances is it? Like anything that Ford may have built in to artificially raise the line pressure or something on those trucks so they could use the same trans build and shove it in a 450 and it would rock out? Then these guys change the programming and hard parts and everything gets shifted way out of whack.
Like.... if the tcu had some kind of offset built in, and then a trans with enlarged holes, increased friction count and a program with line set for a normal situation were used it would be too much.
Customs tunes should over-ride that if there was such a thing wouldn't they?
I really like this tune... And this is just a STREET tune... The trans feels fine. I think that the trans could be softened up a little bit more, but this is a very nice running rig again.Corb I do know tuning gas engines that if you have a built tranny you dont tune the tranny pressure tables the same. Reason is what you are seeing. To much pressure. Basically I would use the stock pressure tables starting out then increase slowly.
Sent from the bat phone near a drilling rig.