spedtoe169
Mechanical
- Sep 24, 2001
- 16
Hi, I'm a Mechanical Engineer by education and a Racecar Engineer by trade and I have a question I've not been able to answer anywhere else.
I'm building a transaxle for my street car and need it to last with the added power I'll be putting through it. The car is a '94 Toyota Celica ST with the C52 Manual Transaxle. When all is said and done I'll be making about 300hp at the crank and it will be a daily driven car. Aftermarket gears are not available, they would have to be custom and would likely be very costly.
I have a spare tranny that I started disassembling today and there was visible wear on the pinion (not so much on the ring gear). I haven't had much time to look at the other gears but they looked ok on first inspection.
My question is this: What treatments are available to increase the strength and durability of transmission gears and which of them work? I've read everything I can find about Cryogenic treatments and they seem to work although nobody knows why. I've had our racecar transmission REM treated. This seems to lower gearbox temps and reduce friction but I doubt it really does much for durability (other than the obvious stuff less heat does for you). I've also heard of shot-peening gears.
What does everybody think?
Thanks!
John Dolecek
Team Engineer
Wheels America BMW
I'm building a transaxle for my street car and need it to last with the added power I'll be putting through it. The car is a '94 Toyota Celica ST with the C52 Manual Transaxle. When all is said and done I'll be making about 300hp at the crank and it will be a daily driven car. Aftermarket gears are not available, they would have to be custom and would likely be very costly.
I have a spare tranny that I started disassembling today and there was visible wear on the pinion (not so much on the ring gear). I haven't had much time to look at the other gears but they looked ok on first inspection.
My question is this: What treatments are available to increase the strength and durability of transmission gears and which of them work? I've read everything I can find about Cryogenic treatments and they seem to work although nobody knows why. I've had our racecar transmission REM treated. This seems to lower gearbox temps and reduce friction but I doubt it really does much for durability (other than the obvious stuff less heat does for you). I've also heard of shot-peening gears.
What does everybody think?
Thanks!
John Dolecek
Team Engineer
Wheels America BMW