AMG bluetop solenoid part number
AMG bluetop solenoid part number
Hi all,
I will be looking to upgrade the shift solinoids to the blue top AMG units in my 722.6 transmission, does anyone have the part numbers for them - I am guessing that they are Bosch units? My thought is that it will be most cost effective to simply get the Bosch part rather than the ones with Mercedes stamped on them that are usually more!
240 270 00 89
ECS tuning has the best deal on these (at least here in the US)
http://www.ecstuning.com/Search/240_270_...ES1802187/
Not that I know of, obviously a stand alone controller would help.
(08-06-2015, 04:35 AM)Duncansport The only AMG 722.6 that uses the blue tops is the SLR.
The v12 tt transmissions have the blue tops in as do the later 55k cars.
What are you trying to achieve with what car and how much power. Maybe I can help point you in the right direction.
(08-06-2015, 07:57 AM)whipplem104 The v12 tt transmissions have the blue tops in as do the later 55k cars.
What are you trying to achieve with what car and how much power. Maybe I can help point you in the right direction.
(08-06-2015, 07:57 AM)whipplem104 The v12 tt transmissions have the blue tops in as do the later 55k cars.
What are you trying to achieve with what car and how much power. Maybe I can help point you in the right direction.
For those power levels you can just have the box beefed up for the extra power. I would cross reference the clutch baskets in your box in epc to see what it has in comparison to a v8 transmission from say an E500 or S500. Add the extra clutches were required. Increasing the main working pressure is not really necessary. What you need to increase is the shift pressure. Blue tops would be a good way to get this done. They net between 25-50psi for shift and working pressure. This is a pretty big gain in % of the total pressures in a stock valve body.
If you are going to go with a standalone tcu you will not need valve body mods as you can tune the pressures. But you will not have tq management during gear changes either.
(08-06-2015, 03:59 PM)whipplem104 For those power levels you can just have the box beefed up for the extra power. I would cross reference the clutch baskets in your box in epc to see what it has in comparison to a v8 transmission from say an E500 or S500. Add the extra clutches were required. Increasing the main working pressure is not really necessary. What you need to increase is the shift pressure. Blue tops would be a good way to get this done. They net between 25-50psi for shift and working pressure. This is a pretty big gain in % of the total pressures in a stock valve body.
If you are going to go with a standalone tcu you will not need valve body mods as you can tune the pressures. But you will not have tq management during gear changes either.
(08-06-2015, 03:59 PM)whipplem104 For those power levels you can just have the box beefed up for the extra power. I would cross reference the clutch baskets in your box in epc to see what it has in comparison to a v8 transmission from say an E500 or S500. Add the extra clutches were required. Increasing the main working pressure is not really necessary. What you need to increase is the shift pressure. Blue tops would be a good way to get this done. They net between 25-50psi for shift and working pressure. This is a pretty big gain in % of the total pressures in a stock valve body.
If you are going to go with a standalone tcu you will not need valve body mods as you can tune the pressures. But you will not have tq management during gear changes either.
An idea i had for torque management with a standalone controller and EDC pump is a transistor mounted in parralel to the MAP sensor. When the standalone TCU outputs a signal for upshift it pulls down the MAP sensor output and the ECU thinks manifold pressure is reduced and cuts fuel.
That is not a bad idea but you would have to try it to see if it would work. Also not set a fault code.