nonickatall
Full Access Member
I also think that gearboxes, that fail after an oil change, are gearboxes where the oil change was made, because the gearbox ran poorly and one hoped that the oil change would improve the situation.I was a GM dealer tech, started at Chevy dealer in mid-70's. Never worked at a shop that had a transmission flush machine and have never done a transmission flush. I've done countless transmission services on newer vehicles and high mileage vehicles, basically drop pan, drain fluid, replace filter and fluid. I've never had one that went bad because of "stirring something up". Those that went bad were on their way well before the service and they were trying to band aid it. Anything that might get "stirred up" would be stopped by the filter. I think some of the tales might have been started back in the old filter style days where the filter might have been prone to clogging, I'm talking real old days.
Transmission flush maschines as they are necessary in Germany are probably popular for two reasons, firstly, with today's transmissions it is no longer the case that you simply change the oil with the oil dipstick to check the oil level and everything is fine.
If you change the oil in an modern Audi, for example Then you have to use a pump to push the transmission oil into the transmission pan from below. This has to happen at a very specific transmission temperature.
You then have to bring the transmission to a very specific temperature which you need to read out in your software system where you have access to the transmission and then you must set the transmission oil to the right level. The German car manufacturers manage it to change a transmission from something completely banal to rocket technology close.
But changing the way it used to be done by you, by removing the pan, changing the filter and refilling the oil that came out of the gearbox, doesn't help much from my point of view, because if I overhaul a gearbox and the gearbox is completely dry, then I fill about 9 liters of oil into the ystem. When unscrewing the oil pan, only about 3.5 liters of oil come out.
And that is in almost all of the transmissions, because 2/3 of the oil is in the transmission and does not come out of the pan during a normal oil change.
And If you look at the filter of an automatic transmission, you will see that it is not a paper filter like oil filters or another material that filters out the finest particles, but it is usually a fiber filter in a tin can or plastic housing.
This service to catch chunks that have broken off somewhere. Point of abrasion in a gearbox is so fine that it doesn't matter much to the gearbox. And the other metall wear is catchet by the magnets in the oil pan.
That's why I still think that: If I had the choice of removing the oil pan and changing the filter and swapping only 1/3 of the oil.
Or leaving the filter where it is and flushing the transmission through the oil cooler, I would always prefer that method, because you can change almost 100% of the oil.
The very best method you can do to your transmission is of course, removing the pan, replacing the filter and possibly replacing the shift magnets as with the GM transmission, then mount the pan back on and then flushing the transmission to remove the remaining 2/3 of the old oil from the transmission. But since this is a considerable effort for most hobby DIY.
I would rather just flush the gearbox, which every layman can do and thus do 90% maintenance instead of do nothing because being afraid to do the rest 10% as well.
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