It's all good! It's supposed to be fun!
1) Jumbo, what is the difference between your bought "Shift Kit" and the Valve Body Upgrade....??
Valve body upgrade is the entire valve body - the electronics that control it are included. Getting a valve body upgrade gives you a new transmission ECU and physical valve body. Doing a shift kit ONLY uses the stock transmission ECU - something I wanted to do to keep the FX feel. The shift kit improves the speed of the shift (bigger, stiffer springs). I can do a good voice impression of the difference in sound (my wife understood it perfectly) but I'd have to record it and that seems a little too much.
2) Jumbo, having a RWD with the 3.3 final gears and Rookie telling us that that gearsetup would increase more stress on the tranny would you reconsider buying another final drive like 3.7 or 3.9...?? Guys here tell me to wait on that because they find that with F/I you'll get enough power in lower gears, but many guys on the forum here suggest me to go for a 3.9. I don't do track or drag also and am affraid that it will be far to much power in first gears so everything will keep spinning.
I haven't looked into changing the final gear yet - but this discussion makes me think I will be - very soon.
3) Chinke your aviator says your going back from the GTM TC to a "Stock Stall" TC....what does that mean....??
If you care - here's the basics of a TC
View attachment 172394
Did you know there is no mechanical link between your engine and your transmission? It's entirely FLUID. One fluid turbine (engine) spins a fluid pump- a lot like a turbo uses air (exhaust) to spin an air turbine. In this case, the fluid pump output is connected to the transmission. This was all news to me until I decided to educate myself. Luckily I'm an engineer and understand all this fun stuff.
This is totally different design than a manual transmission which uses a clutch instead of the TC - much more efficient for transfer of power than a TC. The whole reason for the TC is to allow the engine to spin freely during deceleration - but there is still a little bit of drag since the TC is still transferring power to your transmission even while you are braking. The manual transmission simply disengages the clutch and allows the engine to spin in what is essentially neutral, with no power input into the transmission.
Chinke's FX was modified with a GTM torque converter and he just didn't like the feel. It performed more like a drag transmission - not what he was going for in a daily driver. So he's going with a new Torque Converter closer to stock stall. Stall is the RPM at which the shift occurs. Higher stall means the RPMs are higher than stock when the gear shift occurs. The advantage is more power going into and immediately following a shift. I addressed the very same feel issue by having my stock Torque Converter modified. Again, to keep some of that FX soul, but improved to handle FI when that comes around.