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I think putting it in perspective if the key. The 4l60 isn’t junk, it is really good but it is 60 meaning 6,000 pound maximum capacity.
4l80 is meant for 8,000 max capacity, but the 4l80 is just so amazingly designed that they can be upgraded to handle weights way into high teens and still last 100,000 miles.
It took allison- who made their money making auto transmissions for semi trucks, trash trucks, etc. to take their insanely well designed transmissions and shrink it down to fit in a pickup to finally beat the 4l80 platform.
But as to allison really beating it, there are some points the 4l80 still wins. In fleets we learned just leave it alone, dont even do filter changes in trucks and suburbans that don’t tow heavy and you will still get 250,000 miles before the first hiccup, and 200,000 if it did tow heavy. Don’t do that to the ally- shes gonna have problems at 150,000ish it you don't do basic filter changes.
Modern transmissions in many cars extend their life by being completely sealed. By not venting and not having a dipstick it keeps out dirt and most importantly moisture. I know a big part of that is the difference in oil, but I wonder if that technique would make the 4l80 last even longer. Imagine a pickup that tows heavy getting 300,000+ miles and never needing filter or oil.