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Indexing TCC-Piston/Damper
Assemblies to Turbines
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At a recent TASC Force meeting, one
of the members expressed concern about an increase in the
number of worn-out bores in TCC pistons that he was seeing.
Although the problem is prevalent in many different pistons,
his main focus was on the GM 298mm pistons. He went on to
clarify: The worn-out bores were not being found on OE
converters that were coming in for rebuild. The problem was
happening only on previously rebuilt converters. The consensus
was that the problem was caused by an out-of-balance condition,
and there was a great deal of speculation about why this was
happening.
When the OEMs build a converter, they
balance the turbine and the clutch individually to a tolerance
of 1 gram-inch. The two components then are mated together,
with the heavy spot of the turbine indexed directly opposite
the heavy spot on the clutch. On the 298mm GM converter, the
heavy spot on the turbine is where the balance weight was
added. This spot is marked with a paint dab at the factory (see
Figure 1).
The paint dab is usually light gray but,
unfortunately, usually disappears the first time the part is
cleaned in a pressure washer. Remember that the turbine is
balanced to a tolerance of 1 gram-inch or less, so the heavy
spot will be from 0 to 1 gram heavier. The heavy spot on the
TCC clutch is where the notches of metal were removed from the
skirt of the piston for balance purposes (see Figure 2).
Since the clutch is balanced to the same
tolerance as the turbine, it, too, will be from 0 to 1 gram
heavier at this spot. The two parts are indexed together and
balanced as a unit. If they now balance to 1 gram-inch or less,
the unit is OK. If the balance is off by more than 1 gram-inch,
the clutch is rotated one spline left or right and rebalanced.
If the balance is now within specs, the unit is OK. But if the
weight needed to balance the unit increased when the clutch was
rotated, then the clutch is rotated to the opposite direction
and rebalanced.
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The factory wants to have the heavy spots
line up within 45° of directly opposite. You will seldom
see a turbine and clutch that are more than 25° from
directly opposite. The machine that does the balancing of the
turbine and clutch is fully automated. The welding of the
weight to the turbine and the milling of the weight from the
clutch are done on the machine. The truly remarkable part is
that this work is done at a rate of about 120 parts an hour.
Some 500 and 518 TCC pistons have a paint
dab like the one seen on the 298mm GM turbines. The paint dab
can be on either the front or back side of the clutch and lines
up opposite the weight on the turbine. The 518 piston in Figure
3 has the paint dab on the back.
On the Cummins TCC clutch the heavy spot is
marked with a stamped arrow (see Figure 4).
You may have noticed that the wear in the
bore of the Cummins piston is always on the side of the bore
that is opposite the notches in the piston and the arrow.
On some of the import TCC pistons you may
find an ink dab marking the heavy spot. Figure 5 is a good
example of this on a Honda TCC clutch. The weight on a Honda
turbine is indexed on the opposite side (see Figure 6).
Since most pressure washers are not
ink-spot or paint-dab friendly, scratching an “X”
across the paint or ink dab would be a good habit to cultivate.
This is especially helpful if the original part is less than 1
gram-inch out of balance
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and no modification is necessary (no weight
added, no weight removed).
Since the turbine and the clutch each can
be as much as 1 gram-inch heavy on a side and still be within
specs, if the two heavy spots are both on the same side, the
turbine/clutch unit could be as much as 2 gram-inches out of
balance. This could explain the worn-out bores in the clutches.
A good rule of thumb is to index the heavy
spot of the turbine (where the weight is added) opposite the
heavy spot of the clutch (where the weight has been removed).
This will prove beneficial even if your shop doesn’t have
a balancer.
For more information, visit Balance
Technology’s Web site, www.balancetechnology.com, or
Diamond Precision Products, www.diamondprecision.com.
Special thanks to Jim Beattie of ATI and
Maura Stafford of Sonnax for their technical
assistance in writing this article.
Ed Lee is a Sonnax technical specialist and
a
member of the TASC Force (Technical Automotive Specialties Committee), a group of recognized industry technical specialists, transmission rebuilders and Sonnax Industries Inc. technicians. |
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©2006 Transmission Digest
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