Just how much HP can a NA tranny take?
Just how much HP can a NA tranny take?
Sorry for the newb question but I cant seem to find it by seraching the site.
I read that a standard tranny wont hold up to a TII motor hp. Yet there is only a 40hp +/- and 43+/- Ftlbs of torque.
I just want to know how far I can push a NA tranny before I need to think about stepping it up.
Is there a number that people use as a "Dont go over "XXX HP" ...
Thanks
2988008
I read that a standard tranny wont hold up to a TII motor hp. Yet there is only a 40hp +/- and 43+/- Ftlbs of torque.
I just want to know how far I can push a NA tranny before I need to think about stepping it up.
Is there a number that people use as a "Dont go over "XXX HP" ...
Thanks
2988008
Generally 200whp is considered to be the outside limit for a NA transmission.
It will hold more than that without breaking, but you have to be gentle on it. If you're rough with it, even around 200hp, you can break it.
There are people who have run 250hp or so through a NA transmission (I think Kevin was pushing something around there), and they'll last for a while (year or two) if you're gentle, but eventually they break. IIRC the common failure mode is the teeth sheering off the countershaft input gear.
Another factor is that a turbo engine puts a lot more torque through the transmission. A 200hp NA is generally making that kind of power at 7000+ RPM, whereas a turbo engine can be making 200hp at 4000-5000 RPM - a lot more torque on the input side.
-=Russ=-
It will hold more than that without breaking, but you have to be gentle on it. If you're rough with it, even around 200hp, you can break it.
There are people who have run 250hp or so through a NA transmission (I think Kevin was pushing something around there), and they'll last for a while (year or two) if you're gentle, but eventually they break. IIRC the common failure mode is the teeth sheering off the countershaft input gear.
Another factor is that a turbo engine puts a lot more torque through the transmission. A 200hp NA is generally making that kind of power at 7000+ RPM, whereas a turbo engine can be making 200hp at 4000-5000 RPM - a lot more torque on the input side.
-=Russ=-
^ +1 Torque breaks things, not HP. Moreso, shock breaks things too. If you're gentle, when you shift and come on power, the tranny won't break until there is enough torque to twist the casing enough to seperate the gears enough to shear the teeth. That's a LOT of load. But who drives like little girls?
Im not sure if it will work, but flying miata has a beefed up gear set for the Miata tranny. IIRC the FC na tranny and the miata 5 speed are very similar.
http://www.flyinmiata.com/index.php?...0500%20%20WIDE
For $2500 though, you are better getting a TII tranny.
BC
http://www.flyinmiata.com/index.php?...0500%20%20WIDE
For $2500 though, you are better getting a TII tranny.

BC
im running about 250 whp through an na trans. so far so good but its only been going for 1k miles.. im gentle on it but i have a couple drift events this month so ill let you know. i have a turbo train waiting for when this snaps though so im not too worried
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I use to run 280 Rwhp through mine.
First lasted about 6 months then blew 2 more in about 1 month.
Have now got a Turbo one and its fine on 340Rwhp.
dont waist your time with them, change to a Turbo one.
First lasted about 6 months then blew 2 more in about 1 month.
Have now got a Turbo one and its fine on 340Rwhp.
dont waist your time with them, change to a Turbo one.
Originally Posted by 2988008
Kinda what i figured but even the torque numbers had me wondering.
Can a NA tranny be beefed up during a rebuild to handle more torque?
Thanks
2988008
Can a NA tranny be beefed up during a rebuild to handle more torque?
Thanks
2988008
Originally Posted by stevensimon
im running about 250 whp through an na trans. so far so good but its only been going for 1k miles.. im gentle on it but i have a couple drift events this month so ill let you know. i have a turbo train waiting for when this snaps though so im not too worried
I assume you have a way to get the car home when the tranny explodes mid-drift?
Actually, depending on the distance/driving, *most* of the failures involve the input gear to the countershaft failing, which leaves 4th gear. If you're careful, you can start from a stop in 4th, but it's hard on the clutch, and not suited to stop and go driving at ALL.
-=Russ=-
Syonyk im not trying to call you out or anything, but ive read on past threads that the t2 and n/a tranny gears (not gearing) are pretty much identicle, but the housing is just beefed up on the t2?? ive kinda been looking for a straight answer on this same subject.
If you're careful, you can start from a stop in 4th, but it's hard on the clutch, and not suited to stop and go driving at ALL.
lmao this sounds brutal.
Originally Posted by Syonyk
If you're careful, you can start from a stop in 4th, but it's hard on the clutch, and not suited to stop and go driving at ALL.
I wish I was driving!
Joined: Dec 2001
Posts: 5,241
Likes: 84
From: BC, Canada
Originally Posted by sidewayz_FC
Syonyk im not trying to call you out or anything, but ive read on past threads that the t2 and n/a tranny gears (not gearing) are pretty much identicle, but the housing is just beefed up on the t2?? ive kinda been looking for a straight answer on this same subject.
lmao this sounds brutal.
lmao this sounds brutal.
Originally Posted by scathcart
They're not even close to being the same on the inside. You think the extra 30+ lbs comes from more meat in an aluminum casing?
Originally Posted by arghx
I blew my NA tranny and diff from drag racing with a 4 puck clutch. Stay away from puck clutches, they are hell on the car.
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