What I found running the "stock" gears (whatever dp they are) for the cb/spur was that the clutch couldn't take the power of a big block very well.
I ran RRP steel in the trans for all gears with the RRP FOC. The only plastic gears remaining in the trans were the large two speed gears. I ran about 10 gallons or so through my trans with an OS 21 RG on my XTM converted maxx. During those 10 gallons, I chewed up the large two speed gears twice, 1 two speed one way and 1 two speed main shaft. After all that, the RRP gears still look like new. I also ran boca green seal bearings and an aluminum trans case to minimize case flex from trashing my investment in the RRP gears. They get pricey when you add them all up.
I had serious clutch problems throughout gallons 1-7. Running the stock type spur/cb I could only use the stock type clutch. I tried MIP shoes, integy aluminum shoes and stock shoes. We all know integy's aluminum sux and it sux bad for shoes. The MIP shoes lasted a gallon or so and so did stock.
Since I had an actual 21 conversion chassis, which is longer by about an inch between the trans and rear shock tower, I was able to run an 1/8 scale clutch system using an RCS spur. After installing the 1M pitch gear with an OFNA bell/savage flywheel/HPI teflon 3-shoe clutch, I never had a clutch problem throughout the last 3-4 gallons of the truck...
but... I did have a diff problem. But the diff problem went on and on throughout all 10 gallons. I think I rebuilt the diffs about once a gallon or so. I was using integy diff cases and maximizer diff cups with proper shims to keep the ring/pinion tight. But, the ring/pinion would shell out around a gallon or so anyway. Before going to this diff setup (running stock), they would only last 4-5 tanks before they would start clicking.
The RCS gear I'm talking about is
RC-Solutions. Good gear, great idea. I'd suggest going that route before dumping a bunch of dough into a 1/10 clutch/spur setup.
If I had it to do all over again... I'd have started with a savage