So I swapped a 1993 CPI (Vortec) 4.3V6 into my Toyota, hooked up to a TH350 transmission and then to a toyota t-case (w/ adapter). Once i got everything hooked up, I started the truck up, let it warm up and then put it into gear to go for a test drive. as soon as I put it in the gear, the truck lurched forward and then the engine died. I tried again and again and everytime it does the same thing. So I replaced teh torque converter thinking that was the problem... well even with the new torque converter it is still doing the same thing.
I jacked the rear tires off the ground and put the truck in gear. The rear tires start spinning (at about 10MPH) and if I slowly start putting the brakes on until the tires stop turning completely... the truck will bog way down (to 500RPM or less) but continue to run. While this is happening, you can deffinately hear some kind of a grinding noise coming from around the tranny (it sounds a lot like the sound that a worn out bearing makes). Anyways, is my tranny toast? Should I start looking for another? Or could the problem be something else?
I just thought of something... could it be that the stall on the torque converter is too low? My truck idles at around 900-1000 RPM and the torque converter is just a stock rebuilt converter...
I jacked the rear tires off the ground and put the truck in gear. The rear tires start spinning (at about 10MPH) and if I slowly start putting the brakes on until the tires stop turning completely... the truck will bog way down (to 500RPM or less) but continue to run. While this is happening, you can deffinately hear some kind of a grinding noise coming from around the tranny (it sounds a lot like the sound that a worn out bearing makes). Anyways, is my tranny toast? Should I start looking for another? Or could the problem be something else?
I just thought of something... could it be that the stall on the torque converter is too low? My truck idles at around 900-1000 RPM and the torque converter is just a stock rebuilt converter...
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