Heres the fix
I have found the fix for my 2002 Chevy Tahoe 5.3L, 4l60 transmission hard shift from 1st to 2nd!! For those of you who just want the fix, scroll down to “Here’s The Fix”. All others read on!
I bought a 2002 Tahoe with 75,000 miles on it. It ran pretty good for about 20,000 miles then the hard shift from 1st to 2nd. Usually after the transmission had warmed up. Before I decided to rebuild it, I replaced the valve body assembly with a new one. No help. At 120,000 mile, I had a good friend rebuild it for me. He said the transmission was exceptionally clean. He did find a valve at the end of the wiring harness that had a small hairline crack in it that was along the line of where the two plastic pieces were molded together. The name of the valve/coil is the TCC (torque converter clutch) lockup solenoid and is soldered to the end of the wiring harness. He said this could have cause the torque converter to slip and lose pressure. After the rebuild, it ran better, but not perfect. I thought a rebuild would have fixed it. Well, 65,000 miles later, the 1-2 shift solenoid went bad. There was no clunk because it was not shifting from first to second. It was starting out in second gear. So I called my friend and he gave me a new 1-2 shift coil. (both 1-2 and 2-3 shift coils are about $40) I told him that it still clunked between 1st and 2nd. He told me that after replacing the 1-2 shift coil, to remove the accumulator and remove the piston and inspected the o-ring and wall of the accumulator. If you have a plastic piston, replace it with a new aluminum one. Mine was already replaced. Both looked good.
Here’s the Fix!!
He told me to adjust the Force motor (pressure solenoid). The accumulator must be removed to adjust or remove the force motor. As you look at the end of the force motor, there is a torx socket there that adjust the pressure. There is also a ring around the torx socket that might need to be held as you adjust the screw. He told me to turn the screw ¼ turn clockwise. (or from 12:00 to 3 o’clock) My outer ring did not turn as I adjusted the screw. If yours does, use a pair of right angle snap ring pliers to hold it. This force motor engages the 1-2 band. If there is not enough pressure, the band slips and hence the clunk. OMG!!! You would think I have a brand new Tahoe!!! It is SOOOO SMOOTHHHH! I have searched everywhere on the internet and not found this fix. I hope that this easy low cost fix works for you. If you can view the pictures, the accumulator is in the lower right hand corner and the force motor is directly to the left of the accumulator.