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What does STR mean?

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Old 08-31-2009, 07:34 PM
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Default What does STR mean?

Looking to buy a coverter soon and I'm seeing these STR numbers. What do they mean and what should I look for in a daily driver with bolt on mods only, maybe heads and cam in a year or so.
Old 08-31-2009, 08:00 PM
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Here is some info that might help you.


http://www.converter.cc/faq/
Old 08-31-2009, 08:47 PM
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Its in the stickies. Quoted from Yank, so the info is probably in the link but you don't have to search for it on their site.

Static Torque Ratio. I will leave the explaination of this to the experts at Yank
"The stall torque ratio is the amount of engine torque that the torque converter can multiply at a particular rpm level. By definition, stall torque ratio is when the turbine is at 0 RPMs and the converter is at maximum designed stall. This will produce a positive push on the turbine to increase the torque to the input shaft of the transmission, multiplied by the designed stall torque ratio of the torque converter. For example, a stall torque ratio of 2.0 would multiply 200 lb. ft. of engine torque to 400 lb. ft. of torque at the transmission input-shaft. The misconception of stall torque ratio is that more must be better. This is not always the case. High stall torque ratio applications, typically are for industrial equipment or engines with limited low rpm engine torque. With high stall toque ratio converters, there are important trade-offs. What you take at one end you give up on the other. Typically, a torque converter with a very high stall torque ratio, such as 2.0-2.5, will be much less efficient above its rated stall speed. There is a sacrifice in higher rpm efficiency to achieve high stall torque ratios. That lower efficiency translates into less horsepower transmitted to the tires over an RPM range. The problem with a high stall torque ratio converter is that it is only high while the car is not moving. Maximum stall torque ratio occurs at wide open throttle with no rotation of the transmission input shaft. As the input shaft starts to rotate with vehicle forward movement, the stall torque ratio will become non-existent much sooner than a converter of the same stall, with a lower stall torque ratio." (Yank)
Old 09-01-2009, 07:32 PM
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thanks!!



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