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I have a question about transmission tuning and I think that this first question is new because I have conducted a few searches and have come up with nothing. My second and third questions are just to help me clarify. My 1st question is that in the transmission setting if you want to decrease the amount of wheel spin in a given wheel you make that gear taller decrease the number in that specific gear field. This seems to work on decreasing wheel spin but even when I tried to match the gears that followed I still could not produce a better split time for the test track 400m or 1000m. I will give you an example I have a full moded NA tuned Toyota Trueno (non SS) that rides on simulation tires to increase the effects of wheel spin on the determining gears. The car has no changes in suspension or LSD basically at stock setting except TCS and ASM are set at zero after all of the upgrades modifications. The reason that I chose to do it this way is because if I can get rid of some power over steer before I fool with the suspension and LSD it should be easier to set up the suspension and LSD at a later date. The transmission is set so the cars top speed will be 140 Mile Per Hour this top speed remains constant throughout the whole test. Set the car to automatic so the shift points dont change. So you take the car to the test track and make the gears that create wheel spin taller to decrease wheel spin. I find that your split times have decreased on both the 400m and the 1000m. You then spend time on trying to match the gears better only to find the same lower split times. Maybe My theory is wrong or I am doing something wrong in the setup or maybe you just have to sacrifice split time for the decrease in wheel spin. If you can clarify please do it would be greatly appreciated?
I also have another question I have heard that when tuning your transmission that the final gear ratio relates how many times the drive shaft has to spin to produce on wheel rotation. A hypothetical example is that if you have the final gear set at 4.0 then it has to turn 4 times to create on wheel rotation. If it was then changed to 1.0 it would mean that the rotation of the drive shaft is equal to the rotation of the wheel. If I follow this it makes sense that a lower final gear would produce more top end. The thing that bothers me is how exactly does increasing the amount of times the drive shaft has to rotate to create one wheel rotation create quicker acceleration. It would seem to me that more drive shaft rotations to create one wheel rotation is counter productive.
Last question how does this relate to the individual gear ratios. Once again this is what I have heard if you can clarify it would be greatly appreciated. 
I also have another question I have heard that when tuning your transmission that the final gear ratio relates how many times the drive shaft has to spin to produce on wheel rotation. A hypothetical example is that if you have the final gear set at 4.0 then it has to turn 4 times to create on wheel rotation. If it was then changed to 1.0 it would mean that the rotation of the drive shaft is equal to the rotation of the wheel. If I follow this it makes sense that a lower final gear would produce more top end. The thing that bothers me is how exactly does increasing the amount of times the drive shaft has to rotate to create one wheel rotation create quicker acceleration. It would seem to me that more drive shaft rotations to create one wheel rotation is counter productive.