TorqueFlite
TorqueFlite is the trademarked name of Chrysler Corporation's automatic transmissions, starting with the three-speed unit introduced late in the 1956 model year as a successor to Chrysler's two-speed PowerFlite. In the 1990s, the TorqueFlite name was dropped in favor of alphanumeric designations, although the latest ZF-based transmissions with the eight-speed automatic has revived the name.
History
Torqueflites use torque converters and Simpson gearsets, two identical planetary gearsets sharing a common sun gear. Chrysler Corporation licensed this gearset from Simpson in 1955.The first Torqueflites provided three speeds forward plus reverse. Gear ratios were 2.45:1 in first, 1.45 in second, and 1.00 in third. The transmission was controlled by a series of pushbuttons located on the vehicle's dashboard. The buttons were generally at the extreme driver's side end of the dash, i.e., the left in left-hand drive vehicles, and the right in right-hand drive ones. However, this was not always the case; the 1962 Dodge Phoenix, a right-hand drive export model sold in Australia and South Africa, used the U.S. 1962 Plymouth Valiant instrument cluster assembly, into the left end of which were integrated the transmission pushbuttons. Button arrangement varied by vehicle model and year; sequence was reverse, neutral, drive, second, and first, from top to bottom with vertically arrayed buttons, from left to right with horizontally arrayed buttons, and clockwise starting at upper left with clustered buttons.
A parking lock was not provided until the advent of the aluminum-case Torqueflites in 1960 and 1962, at which point a lever was added adjacent to the pushbuttons: Moving the lever to the "park" position placed the car into neutral and engaged a lock pawl on the transmission's output shaft. Moving the park lever out of "park" position unlocked the shift buttons so that a driving range could be selected. The buttons were replaced by conventional steering column- or floor-mounted shift levers in all automatic Chrysler-built vehicles for the 1965 model year, though floor levers were available in certain sporty 1964 models.
Like a vehicle with a General Motors Hydramatic, a vehicle with a Torqueflite transmission starts out in first gear when the drive or second position is selected. This is in contrast to vehicles with several automatics from Ford and Borg-Warner, which start out in second rather than first if the second position is selected.
With 1962 came the addition of a canister-style fluid filter installed in the cooler line. For 1964, the canister filter was eliminated, and the transmission's internal intake screen was replaced by an efficient Dacron filter. Fluid life starting in 1964 was extended from to, providing justification for the deletion of the drain plug from the oil pan.
For 1966, the twin-cable shift and park control mechanism was replaced by a solid shift control linkage consisting of a series of pushrods, rotating rods and levers. The rear pump was eliminated, which simplified and cost-reduced the transmission but rendered push-starting impossible; Chrysler engineers reasoned that improved electrical and fuel systems reduced the need to push-start vehicles, and safety concerns weighed against doing so. The gated shift quadrants also permitted the deletion of the reverse safety blocker valve which, in TorqueFlites made through 1965, had shifted the transmission harmlessly into neutral if the reverse position were selected with the vehicle moving forward above approximately. With the elimination of the rear pump the oil filter was designed with a single oil port.
In 1968, part-throttle downshift functionality was added to A-904 transmissions used with six-cylinder engines. This feature permitted the transmission to shift from third to second gear in response to moderate accelerator pressure. Previously, an automatic 3-2 downshift occurred only if the driver pushed the accelerator to the floor. This change was made to maintain acceptable in-town performance with taller final-drive ratios in the rear axle — 2.76:1 rear axle gears were being furnished in applications previously equipped with 2.93:1 or 3.23:1 gearsets. Part-throttle downshift functionality was extended to V8 A-904s in 1969, and to most A-727 transmissions in 1970 to 1971.
In 1978, most Torqueflite transmissions gained a lockup torque converter clutch to mechanically connect the converter's impeller and turbine, eliminating slip for better highway fuel economy. This addition required the removal of the torque converter drain plug.
For 1980, a wide-ratio gearset was released for the A904, A998 and A999, with 2.74:1 in first, 1.54 in second, and 1.00 in third.
Torqueflite was an available option or standard equipment, depending on model and year, on all Chrysler products: Plymouth, Dodge, DeSoto, Chrysler and Imperial. It was also used by American Motors beginning in 1972, where it was named Torque-Command, as well as by Jeep, International Harvester, Maserati Quattroporte, Monteverdi and Bristol , as well as several brands of light and medium-duty trucks and panel vans. When installed in Dodge trucks and vans, the transmission was marketed as LoadFlite.
In the 1990s, the transmissions were renamed, however the original Torqueflite design remained the basis of many Chrysler designed transmissions through 2007.
Nomenclature
Torqueflite transmissions and transaxles made through 1991 were assigned arbitrary engineering designations consisting of the letter "A" followed by three digits. 1992 and later units have four-character designations in which the first through fourth characters indicate, respectively, the number of forward speeds, torque capacity, drive type or transaxle orientation, and control system:Rear-wheel drive transmissions
A466
The original TorqueFlite was designated A466, with a cast iron case, separate iron converter housing, and no parking pawl.A727 (36RH/37RH)
The A466 was replaced in 1962 with the A727, with a one-piece aluminum case to reduce weight by about. This was initially referred to in consumer-oriented publications as the "TorqueFlite 8" to differentiate it from the A904. The A727 incorporated a parking pawl, with the sole exception of the 1962 Chrysler and Dodge 880 version, which had an extension-mounted drum brake. Compared to the early cast-iron transmissions, many and various internal improvements were featured, and it used a or torque converter. The heavier-duty A727 Torqueflites became — and remain — wildly popular for drag racing, off roading, and monster truck applications because of their controllability, reliability, ease/cheapness of repair and brute strength. Note there are unique bellhousing bolt patterns for the small block "A" and big block "B" engine versions of this transmission, and for the AMC/Jeep applications.- 1962-1978 361, 383, 400 B-Motor V8
- 1962-1978 413, 426 Wedge, 440 RB-V8
- 1966-1971 426 "Street" Hemi
- 1964-1971 426 Race Hemi
- 1962-1966 318 "A" "Poly" V8
- 1968-1973 340
- 1971-1978 360
- H.D. 225 RG slant six and 273/318 V8. The RG application involved a factory adapter plate.
- 1972-1978 AMC "Torque-Command"
- 1980-1991 Jeep
A518 (46RH/46RE)
The A518, later renamed 46RH and 46RE, is an A727 derivative with overdrive, in the A500 ilk. Starting in 1990, it was used in some trucks and vans. The overdrive fourth gear ratio is 0.69:1.Gear ratios:
Applications:
- Dodge Ram pickup and vans 150/250/350 V8 and diesel engines
- Dodge Ramcharger SUV 1988-1993 5.2L & 5.9L V8
- Jeep Grand Cherokee 1993 5.2L, 1998 5.9L
- 1996 Dodge Dakota V8
- 1998-2003 Dodge Durango 5.9L V8
- 1998–2003 Dodge Dakota R/T
- 1994-1995 Dodge Ram 2500/3500 V8
- 1995 Dodge Dakota 5.2l magnum v-8
- X-1995 Dodge Ram Van 2500 5.2L Magnum V8
A618 (47RH/47RE/48RE)
The base design from the original Torqueflite remains largely unchanged and the addition of a 2-speed output shaft that is bolted to the back of the 3-speed transmission has only two ratios: direct and overdrive. While lubrication to the overdrive unit was a challenge early on, this challenge was later overcome with factory improvements and/or aftermarket valve body kits. The overdrive planetary has six pinion gears which is often used as an aftermarket replacement for the stock 4 pinion planetary used with the lighter duty transmissions.
Gear ratios:
Applications:
- Dodge Ram pickups 2500/3500 ISB Diesel and iron V-10
- Dodge Ram SRT-10 f
- 1996-2002 Dodge Ram 2500/3500 Diesel/V10
- 1994-1995 Dodge Ram 2500/3500 Diesel/V10
- 2003-2004 Dodge Ram 2500/3500 ISB Diesel
- 2003-2004 Dodge Ram 2500/3500 HO ISB Diesel
- 2004-2007 Dodge Ram 2500/3500 600/610 Diesel
- 2004-2006 Dodge Ram SRT-10
A904 (30RH)
Uses:
- 1960-1976 170, 198, 225 slant-six
- 1964-1969 273 LA V8
- 1967-1978 318 LA V8
- 1975-1978 360 LA V8 with two-barrel carburetor
- 1972-1977 AMC Hornet
- 1972-1978 AMC Gremlin, AMC Matador with six-cylinder engines
- 1976-1980 AMC Pacer
- 1978-1983 AMC Concord
- 1979-1983 AMC Spirit
- 1980-1983 Jeep CJ, AMC Eagle with GM Iron Duke engine
- 1983-1984 Jeep DJ-5M with AMC 2.5 L
- 1984-1986, 1994-2000 Jeep Cherokee with GM 2.8 L LR2 V6, AMC 2.5 L I4
- 1986 Jeep Comanche with GM 2.8 L V6, AMC 2.5 L I4
- 1994-1995 Jeep Wrangler with four-cylinder engine
- 1997-2002 Jeep Wrangler with four-cylinder engine
A998 (31RH)
Uses:
- 1972-1988 AMC 6 cylinder and 304 V8 engines
A999 (32RH)
Uses:
- 1984-1989 Chrysler M platform vehicles with AHB 318 4bbl police option
- 1994-2003 Dodge Ram Van B150 with Magnum 3.9L V6 engine
- 1994-2003 Dodge Dakota with Magnum 3.9L V6 engine
- 1987-1995 Jeep Wrangler YJ with 6-cylinder engine.
- 1997-2002 Jeep Wrangler TJ with 6-cylinder engine.
- Jeep Wagoneer/Grand Wagoneer with the 258ci straight-6
A500 (40RH/42RH/40RE/42RE/44RE)
Gear ratios:
Applications:
- 1989-2001 Dodge Ram pickup 150/1500 V6/V8
- 1989-2003 Dodge Ram Van B150/B250 V6/V8
- 1989-2003 Dodge Dakota
- 1993-2004 Jeep Grand Cherokee I6
- 1996-1998 Jeep Grand Cherokee 5.2 V8
- 1999-2003 Jeep Grand Cherokee 3.1 TD
- 1998-2000 Dodge Durango 5.2L V8 or 2WD )
- 1998-2000 Aston Martin Virage V8 5.3L
Front-wheel drive transaxles
In the late 1970s, Chrysler designed the A404 TorqueFlite three-speed automatic transaxle for its front wheel drive Dodge Omni and Plymouth Horizon subcompact cars. This transaxle would be upgraded in the 1980s into the A413 and A670 units, which were progressively heavier-duty, for Chrysler's K-cars and their derivatives, including the minivans. The four-speed Ultradrive electronic four-speed automatic transaxle would eventually replace it, but the three-speed lasted for more than a decade after the 1989 debut of the four-speed unit.
A404
The light-duty A404 was used with the smallest straight-4 engines from Chrysler, commonly the 1.7 L Volkswagen unit.A413 or 31TH
The A404 was strengthened to become the A413 in 1981. This was used with Chrysler's 2.2 and 2.5 L K-car engines. It was available both with and without a lockup torque converter.Applications:
- 1995-2001 Dodge/Plymouth/Chrysler Neon
- 1982-1995 Chrysler LeBaron
- 1987-1994 Dodge Shadow/Plymouth Sundance/Chrysler
- 1978-1990 Dodge Omni/Plymouth Horizon
- 1981-1989 Plymouth Reliant/Dodge Aries
- 1989-1995 Dodge Spirit/Plymouth Acclaim
- 1983-1988 Plymouth Caravelle
- 1983-1984 Chrysler E-Class
- 1983-1988 Dodge 600/Chrysler New Yorker
- 1982-1983 Dodge 400
- 1988-1993 Dodge Dynasty
- 1983-1987 Dodge Charger
- 1983-1986 Chrysler Executive
- 1984-2007 Dodge Caravan/Grand Caravan/Plymouth Voyager/Grand Voyager
- 1985-1989 Dodge Lancer
- 1989-1991 Chrysler TC by Maserati
A415
A470
The A470 was a strengthened version of the transaxle used with the 2.6 L Mitsubishi Astron engine in the K-cars from 1981 to 1985 and minivans from 1984 through 1987.A670
The highest-specification three-speed transaxle was the A670. It was used with the 3.0 L Mitsubishi V6 engine in Chrysler's cars and minivans from 1987 to 2000.Gear ratios: