Here's the apply plate Jesse is talking about:
On the right, 2nd one down. Much stronger than the stocker, helps keep the legs from bending on the apply ring.
Look in the middle column. It looks like a crown. If you flip it over, it should have a number 7 on it. This means it has shorter legs so you use the thicker steels of the setup in the previous picture or the 9 clutch red eagle friction from alto.
If you have your original tranny, it will probably be a #4. These have longer legs. More prone to bend out and you can't stack as many clutches/steels and you can't use the thicker steels if you want to go that route.
Get one of these bands:
The hole where the anchor pin goes is reinforced and the little ridge where the apply pin pushes on it has a material inside it to reinforce it to keep it from bending under pressure from the apply pin.
The red material has a slightly better coefficient of friction. The kevlar handles heat better and will tolerate any slippage better(it will live if the band ever slips during a hard 1-2).
Use a .500 TV boost valve or the .577" TV boost valve from Brian Hartman. If you go with the .577" you will not need the super servo. It will hit hard enough. Believe me.
Use this orange spring in your 1-2 accumulator:
It will eliminate the needs for all the flipping and blocking stuff.
The along with the improved sprag Jesse talked about will help it live longer and shift firmer.
Make sure when you get your truck back that the fluid is full when up to temperature and that the TV cable is correctly adjusted so it shifts right.
These are just some of the ideas that worked for me. What you use is up to you and your tranny builder. See what kind of warranty he gives. He may be more leanient and give you a better warranty if you go with a full size converter. Just depends on what you want and what he is willing to do.
One more thing. If you go with the Sonnax dual servo for your 4th apply:
Do NOT use the Fairbanks unit, they will hang up on the apply pin. Have the tranny shop (don't cringe) dent the floor pan away from the area where this baby sticks out about 1/2". There have been several instances where the tranny rocked during the shifts and the servo hits the floor. This can punch the apply pin through the band or burn up the band depending on how it strikes the floor. There are some pictures of trannies with this installed. It is a beautiful piece but the tunnel in our trucks just doesn't have enough room for it.
(these are just opinions, everybody's got one)
Sorry so long, I tried to leave out the FLUFF/BS.
HTH,
Blake