I'd recommend looking in your area for a reputable torque converter rebuilder...I'm fortunate to have one here in Vegas and he does all my torque converters, regardless of application, stall, configuration, etc...Many of the big converter builders will order the same parts from Sonnax to build the converter; some will have proprietary parts.One thing I've noticed is the wide variety of prices on converters, even one claiming "billet covers"
- The big names like Yank, Circle-D, etc. seem to want about $1300 for a billet converter from their websites and they are all higher stall than stock
- There are some more obvious names playing in the high $100's like Monster and ProTorque that seem to hold to stock stall if you want
- Then there's this section down around $500 like the reman on RockAuto or a RECON from Transendence
Not all of these list specs to look for the lockup clutch thicknesses as Nick suggested. How does one go about shopping for something that's a definite step up from the stock JMBX in terms of durability without going all in on increased power handling like a 2600rpm stall Circle-D?
The RECON converters are basically stock replications; RECON is a very large converter reman company who builds torque converters for all makes/models sold in the US; they will use the same spec of converter clutch that the factory uses. There's a few others as well...Yank and Circle D specialize in racing / street-strip converters so they don't offer too much in the way of factory stall options. Florida Torque Converters is a good company and builds a variety of converter types for any given year/make/model.
Converter clutch thickness should be .050-.070, BW high energy is preferred.