Apten
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- September 10, 2002
- Messages
- 198
- Reaction score
- 0
- City, State
- St. Louis, MO
- Year, Model & Trim Level
- 99 Sport 4x4
If you choose to run a chip, to increase performance, often times what the chip program contains is a line pressure increase in the trans to 'firm up' the shifts - what we used to do with a valve body. Increasing the 'line pressure' strains the trans pump beyond capabilities, and will prematurely fail it.
the transmission pump is more than capable of supporting more line pressure. Most programmers that firm up shifts change dynamic TV pressure (or Electronic Pressure control <EPC>), which if done right doesn't hurt the transmission at all. When I started developing transmission programming, I spent a great deal of time working with the engineer on the 4R70W transmission project at ford. I've even rebuilt 4R70W's, and converted AOD-E's to 4R70W's. The Engineer I worked with agreed that correct transmission programming would extend (not reduce) the life of a transmission.
On the other hand, you need a modified valve body if you plan on running high HP. The seperator plate, and other VB components are not suitable for much over 450HP. Doing so with a stock valve body will cause transmission failure, regardless of TV pressure or programming. I have a link to a really great article on updating the 4R70w for anyone intrested.
While I can't support all tuners programming, I have doubts that superchips transmission program was the cause of failure on the case above. But many dealers look somthing to blame. Your friend should pursue the problem with the ford "Factory Zone Representative" for his region, and dispute it with the warranty committe at ford.
Brian