Reading through many posts about TC lockup manual control.....I see a lot of failure stories naming "torque" as the killer and lack of holding ability whether it be a stock or aftermarket TC. As I read those posts, I envision a fully locked clutch under WOT being pushed past its relative static hold and just letting go like a worn out manual clutch gives out on a hill. You have to back off for it to grab again, but you've already done some damage from slip. It feels like people blame the engine torque alone for overpowering a TC lockup clutch, no matter the circumstance. Maybe this is likely on a stock TC, but I am skeptical with a fresh, aftermarket TC.
I'm no expert, but I assume the combination of rpm differences at onset of engagement and/or lack of hydraulic clamping pressure are the likely TC killers with manual lockup.
Do you think the hypothetical list below is accurate or bogus for most TC lockup clutch death stories with manual lockup control?:
1) During WOT, engine is below stall speed of converter, so RPM difference between the engine and trans is large. Manual lock up turned on, but slip is excessive, thus too much heat and wear before lock up finally reaches 1:1. A good aftermarket TC may survive this for longer, but still painful and probably the #1 killer.
2) Clutch locked, transmission stays in same gear during deceleration into turn, rpm drops so low that trans pump can't keep up and hydraulic system loosens lockup, throttle is suddenly nailed at corner exit, clutch can't hold until pressure catches back up. No TC should survive this long.
3) During WOT, 1:1 manual lockup complete in current gear and trans makes a shift. RPM difference between the engine and trans new gear quickly spikes and causes clutch slip. Like a manual trans clutch kick to break the tires loose. A good aftermarket TC may survive this for longer.
But if the three scenarios above are prevented, could this eliminate most of the real manual lockup horror stories? Or is there more to it?
I'm dreaming of a manual lock "mode" switch that has some smarts. Its purpose is for road/autocross to safely hold 1:1 within a gear after stall speed is reached and continues holding within that gear until either RPM is too low for the pump or a gear change is needed (locks after stall and remains locked even if it falls below stall, but still above pump min speed). It uses the tach, vehicle speed and gear position to avoid the three scenarios above.
It will kick off with onset of gear changes. It looks at the delta of tach signal and and trans rpm (vehicle speed vs gear selected) to make sure engagement is acceptable. Maybe you can tune a trans computer to do all this for you, but I don't think this is something you would want turning on via computer control in DD duties. I desire to have direct control of tire speed with engine speed within a particular gear, even if I engine brake below stall, then accelerate (like in a manual trans).
I'm not looking for ideas on how to make this happen, but instead establish the criteria necessary to prevent unforeseen failure as I experiment.