Thank you for the reply Nick. I certainly did not want to hear "failure" from someone with your experience, lol. So if its going to break, it should do it soon? Wife and I have a few day trips planned. We just got back from a 1500M round trip to Tennessee, sure glad it did not break there
Yes, agreed - that would have absolutely sucked if you broke down while on your trip - glad it didn't shiit the bed then, haha.
The amount of time you have left before it becomes inoperable impossible to predict.
I'd drop the pan to see what, if anything at the bottom and if you see any pieces of gear teeth you obviously need to pull and overhaul the unit, replacing the gear train along with the usual other stuff. If the problem is the forward sprag, you will still have forward movement in manual low (1) and manual 2nd as the coast clutches come on and are splined to the secondary hub on that sprag gear assembly, which doesn't require the sprag clutch itself to be functional. If it's your low roller clutch (less likely), you'll loose all forward movement in all range settings (except reverse - that will still work). If it's gear train, you'll lose everything.
If it's front pump, that would tell me the rotor is in the process of breaking up and may have fractured into two separate halves (yes, believe it or not the trans will still work for a short duration when this occurs - at least until the rotor completely shatters).
The only other thing I can think of is problem w/converter drain back in that all the fluid drains out of the converter and into the sump (not common w/these transmissions or GM transmissions in general). If it happens again, immediately check fluid level to see if you're way over full - if so, its either converter drain back or pump rotor failure. Also stick a pressure gauge on the trans (main line pressure port is on the drivers side of the trans just behind the bell - look for a 7/16" plug and thread your 0-300 PSI gauge in there (don't use an oil pressure gauge for this as you may destroy it as trans pressures are much higher when driving than engine oil pressures). Pressures should be 55-70 PSI in P,N,D. Reverse should be 100-120 and Manual 2,1 should be 150-175psi.
In case you haven't already seen it, I have a
700R4 Information Thread the covers all aspects of that transmission including diagnosis/troubleshooting, parts selection and rebuilding information.