SpThomass
Member
- Joined
- Mar 9, 2019
- Posts
- 54
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Hey guys, I got an 06 Denali Xl 6.0 and I’m pretty sure a 4L60e, I’ve read that it might be a 65 though I’m doubt it.
my question is, and I don’t wanna sound dumb, but it’s my first winter outside of California so this is all new to me. Does the winter/ cold or whatever delay shift points?
I know my trans is in good condition, I keep it well maintained and it’s never given me an issue other than the time it lost almost 7 quarts driving down the palisades lol.
Since the snowstorm Thursday, I’ve noticed it revs high to shift. And also that the shifts points are delayed. Normally first to second is at 15mph at 2000rpm, for the past few days it’s at 20-25mph at 3000rpm. And after a red light it takes forever to get out first and it revs to almost 3500-4000rpm.
I’ve read about letting it warm up before driving, but I have a performance cooler on it, since I lived in California to deal with the heat, and It takes forever to heat up. Even driving an hour and a half at 80 every morning it never passes 150 degrees Fahrenheit.
Sorry for the wall of text, but I wanted to cover all the bases! Thanks guys!
my question is, and I don’t wanna sound dumb, but it’s my first winter outside of California so this is all new to me. Does the winter/ cold or whatever delay shift points?
I know my trans is in good condition, I keep it well maintained and it’s never given me an issue other than the time it lost almost 7 quarts driving down the palisades lol.
Since the snowstorm Thursday, I’ve noticed it revs high to shift. And also that the shifts points are delayed. Normally first to second is at 15mph at 2000rpm, for the past few days it’s at 20-25mph at 3000rpm. And after a red light it takes forever to get out first and it revs to almost 3500-4000rpm.
I’ve read about letting it warm up before driving, but I have a performance cooler on it, since I lived in California to deal with the heat, and It takes forever to heat up. Even driving an hour and a half at 80 every morning it never passes 150 degrees Fahrenheit.
Sorry for the wall of text, but I wanted to cover all the bases! Thanks guys!