I very recently had the transmission swapped on my '07 Tahoe 5.3L with 165k miles. The replacement was a remanufactured transmission and torque converter from a reputable national remanufacturer. I had it done in a local, smaller shop. I also replaced the radiator with a new OEM unit. At the time the transmission was replaced I was told by the mechanic that he blew out the lines of the old fluid and did not observe an obstruction in the lines.
Prior to the swap the transmission temp would not run above 185 unless I was towing a heavy load through the nearby hills. Even then it would barely rise above 200. Now, with the replacement transmission the temperature slowly rises up to over 205. It takes a long time to warm up to that temp, 30-45 min of city driving in Texas late summer heat. I have gotten it up to 210 at one point after driving local small hills without a load but never pushed it beyond. The engine coolant temperature hits 210 quickly and is steady at that temp so I have no reason to believe it is a radiator issue.
Fluid level is right.
What is considered normal time to reach normal transmission operating temperature?
Any suggestions to diagnose the temperature rise?
Prior to the swap the transmission temp would not run above 185 unless I was towing a heavy load through the nearby hills. Even then it would barely rise above 200. Now, with the replacement transmission the temperature slowly rises up to over 205. It takes a long time to warm up to that temp, 30-45 min of city driving in Texas late summer heat. I have gotten it up to 210 at one point after driving local small hills without a load but never pushed it beyond. The engine coolant temperature hits 210 quickly and is steady at that temp so I have no reason to believe it is a radiator issue.
Fluid level is right.
What is considered normal time to reach normal transmission operating temperature?
Any suggestions to diagnose the temperature rise?
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