I have an 07 Corvette with the A6 tranny. What does this table control?
I have an 07 Corvette with the A6 tranny. What does this table control?
maximum allowed torque when the brakes are applied, ie. so the brakes stop the vehicle.
I count sheep in hex...
Thanks Chris!
Guess you could increase this table so you can do smoky burnouts... LOL
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Not knowing what it was I though maybe it had something to do with torque management. My shifts are awfully sloppy and would like to improve them on this A6.
Nothing pressure wise that you can do about it right now.
Chris has something in the works though...
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Sounds good! I have a table for pressure. The value is 110 psi. What would 115 do?Originally Posted by EC_Tune
there are disables for shift torque management in the latest beta, email support to get access.
Chris...
I count sheep in hex...
Thanks Chris, email sent!Originally Posted by Chris@HPTuners
The factory program sure creates some mushy shifts for my 07 Corvette. Hopefully this can be helped.
It definitely does...
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So then the next release will be able to help my buddies 07 C6 and the soft shifts? Great!
Is it just a complete disable of shift torque management or is it adjustable?
its a complete disable.
It doesn't have to be perfect, it just needs to be done in two weeks...
A wise man once said "google it"
I reprogrammed my PCM to disable TM with the new test beta. Wow! I want to warn people, know what you are doing before trying it. I tried it a few minutes ago and on the 1-2 shift I nearly lost control of the car. It went squirrelly from loss of traction and almost sideways. Pulled out of the throttle as soon as I was going sideways and got straightened up ok. I'm just thankful I did not try the 2-3 first as I would have been going much faster. I have a log of the shift but don't know if it will give us any insight of what went wrong.
I do appreciate the new tuning but need to know what to do to keep the car under control at shift.
I was on concrete with good traction. Wasn't a loss of traction due to poor conditions.
Wow, what vehicle do you have?Originally Posted by 8850
Seems like some serious power. 700+hp?
No 700 hp, I have an almost stock 07 C6 Corvette. It has only an air intake and 160 tstat. 1900 miles on the car. Factory rated at 400 hp. Would need slicks to hold traction or a loose converter to lessen the violent shifts. Rpm's drop from 6300 to about 4100 too quickly with TM disabled. A loose converter would not drop so drastically in rpm.Originally Posted by Overclock This
Last edited by 8850; 04-28-2007 at 12:48 PM.
a loose tq converter would make traction even more non-existant lol trust me.Originally Posted by 8850
As for breaking the tires loose between shifts...thats why they call it Torque management I suppose
It doesn't have to be perfect, it just needs to be done in two weeks...
A wise man once said "google it"
For street use with radials I'm afraid we C6 Corvette guys are going to need a little TM.Originally Posted by Bill@HPTuners
No doubt a converter would require better traction mostly in first gear but the shifts wouldn't be quite so violent. The rpm wouldn't drop as much at shift.
try running a 3500ish stall on radials & tell me how it shifts with TM off unless you completely were to peddle it through all of first gear you'd probably still break the tires loose BADD going 2-3...I literally could see you spinning 1-2-3 gears all the way through with any sort of decent stall in an A6.
It doesn't have to be perfect, it just needs to be done in two weeks...
A wise man once said "google it"
I had a PI 3600 in my 98 Camaro and it definitely did not like radials. I had to run ET Streets on the street. Those stalls are wicked! Would be interesting to see what one would do in this Corvette.Originally Posted by Bill@HPTuners