it appears that it's a 4l80e in 3/4 and one tons. the 4l60e was used in the 1/2 tons
The four-speed Turbo Hydra-Matic 700R4 was introduced for the 1982 model year for use in Chevrolet/GMC vehicles.
In 1990, the Turbo Hydra-Matic 700R4 was renamed the 4L60. Under the new designation, the "4" stands for the number of forward gears, the "L" for longitudinal applications (rear-wheel-drive), and the "60" is the strength rating (less than the 4L80). "60" is the relative torque value. For example, 80 is stronger than 60, which is stronger than 40, etc. A 4L80-E can handle more torque than a 4L60-E. The "E" denotes electronically controlled shifting. The 4L60 however is hydraulically shifted based on governor pressure and TV cable position. 1992 was the last year of widespread usage of the 700R4 (4L60). 1993 Camaro, Corvette and Typhoon were equipped with the last production 700R4. The last design change of the 700R4 was an added checkball to the valve body.
In 1992 electronic controls were added, and it became the 4L60-E. The 4L60E went into service in trucks, vans, and SUVs in 1993 and in all RWD passenger cars (Corvette, F and B/D bodies) in 1994.
So, short answer, without seeing it, would be that you have the THM700R4(or 4L60), as The electronic version wasn't used in trucks until 1993.
The rated horsepower of a 1999 K2500 Chevy truck is 255. The base engine is a V-8 that is 5.7 cubic liters.
The C2500 is 2wd and k2500 is 4wd.
Need to know what year and model the truck is. 1992 Chevy k2500
The 4L80E transmission
Who said it won't ? It will fit right in there with NO problems
under the truck bolted to the engine!
It is a 4L60E
That would be the 4L60E transmission.
NO it will not WORK... That truck must have the 4L80E transmission put in it DUE to the COMPUTOR That's in the 93 truck.
looking for diagram of 5.3 liter v8 engine Chevy silverado truck transmission and torque converter?
Depends on many factors. What particular Chevy truck, what is the mileage, how it is equipped, condition of truck, engine & transmission, and where you live. Go to www.nada.com for an estimate of the value.
That would be the 4L60E trans.