Transmission Woes Continue!

Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.

rockola1971

Full Access Member
Joined
Dec 29, 2016
Posts
2,605
Reaction score
3,512
Location
Indiana (formerly IL)
When the issue occurs it loses first, second, and fourth. It will stay in third gear from a complete stop to as fast as I want to take it and never shift. Then the very next day it may very well run all day long without a single issue. When I pulled the pan the tranny fluid was clean and red. The tranny pan was clean also. What would black dust in the tranny pan indicate?
Black dust would be either material from the 2-4 band and/or clutch material. Some is completely normal on an older tranny but and excessive amount would indicate a burnt up 2-4 band and/or burnt clutches but that would usually make the fluid an orange to brownish color and have a very distinct burnt smell. Assuming you arent having electrical problems caused by corrosion at plug connections I would have to say you have a well worn valve body and valves are sticking in their bores. May also have check balls peening your separator plate which comes with tranny old age.
 

NickTransmissions

Sin City
Supporting Member
Joined
Mar 9, 2023
Posts
1,088
Reaction score
2,613
Location
The transmission bench
When the issue occurs it loses first, second, and fourth. It will stay in third gear from a complete stop to as fast as I want to take it and never shift. Then the very next day it may very well run all day long without a single issue. When I pulled the pan the tranny fluid was clean and red. The tranny pan was clean also. What would black dust in the tranny pan indicate?
Like @rockola1971 said, black dust is a bad sign, if in quantity at the bottom of the pan. You're also going in and out of limp mode (3rd and reverse only).

Did you continuity-test all the solenoids when the pan was off? Visual inspections are fine but only tell half the story...

You need to find the source of the electrical fault that's putting the transmission into limp mode first. Once it's free of electrical problems, only then will you be able to appraise its mechanical health.

My gut tells me it's coming out sooner rather than later but could be wrong...
 
OP
OP
BillHill93

BillHill93

TYF Newbie
Joined
Dec 26, 2023
Posts
13
Reaction score
2
Like @rockola1971 said, black dust is a bad sign, if in quantity at the bottom of the pan. You're also going in and out of limp mode (3rd and reverse only).

Did you continuity-test all the solenoids when the pan was off? Visual inspections are fine but only tell half the story...

You need to find the source of the electrical fault that's putting the transmission into limp mode first. Once it's free of electrical problems, only then will you be able to appraise its mechanical health.

My gut tells me it's coming out sooner rather than later but could be wrong...
I bought a new female plug for the pass-through connector. I installed that new female plug and with it I tested both the a and b solenoid, the 3-2 downshift solenoid, the electronic pressure control solenoid, and the pulse width modulation solenoid for the proper ohms. They all gave the correct readings and by doing it this way it also led me to believe that the internal harness was good. I then tested the a and b solenoid for ohms all the way from the green connector on the PCM. Again I got the correct readings. Doing this also lead me to believe that the wires from the PCM connector to the a and b solenoid were good. I also tested for an external ground and there was none. I continue to get a p0758 code. If there is an electrical issue then I'm not sure where to check next.
 

NickTransmissions

Sin City
Supporting Member
Joined
Mar 9, 2023
Posts
1,088
Reaction score
2,613
Location
The transmission bench
I bought a new female plug for the pass-through connector. I installed that new female plug and with it I tested both the a and b solenoid, the 3-2 downshift solenoid, the electronic pressure control solenoid, and the pulse width modulation solenoid for the proper ohms. They all gave the correct readings and by doing it this way it also led me to believe that the internal harness was good. I then tested the a and b solenoid for ohms all the way from the green connector on the PCM. Again I got the correct readings. Doing this also lead me to believe that the wires from the PCM connector to the a and b solenoid were good. I also tested for an external ground and there was none. I continue to get a p0758 code. If there is an electrical issue then I'm not sure where to check next.
I wonder if Shift Sol B has failed mechanically but the windings inside of it are still putting out the correct resistance...Just a guess....You can swap the two shift solenoids to see if the code changes...If it does and you get a DTC for Sol A, like P0753 (which would be the same solenoid that is now in the 'B' location), you found the problem...If you're still getting Sol B code, drop the valve body and check the 2-3 shift valve, 2-3 shuttle valve (both are behind Solenoid B) and the 3-2 downshift valve to see if any are stuck or dragging...There's no spring tension behind the 2-3 shift and shuttle valve as there's no spring in that bore...Just the two valves: Shuttle valve is outboard, shift valve is inboard.
 
OP
OP
BillHill93

BillHill93

TYF Newbie
Joined
Dec 26, 2023
Posts
13
Reaction score
2
I wonder if Shift Sol B has failed mechanically but the windings inside of it are still putting out the correct resistance...Just a guess....You can swap the two shift solenoids to see if the code changes...If it does and you get a DTC for Sol A, like P0753 (which would be the same solenoid that is now in the 'B' location), you found the problem...If you're still getting Sol B code, drop the valve body and check the 2-3 shift valve, 2-3 shuttle valve (both are behind Solenoid B) and the 3-2 downshift valve to see if any are stuck or dragging...There's no spring tension behind the 2-3 shift and shuttle valve as there's no spring in that bore...Just the two valves: Shuttle valve is outboard, shift valve is inboard.
If in fact one of the valves are stuck does that mean that the valve body would need to be replaced? Also I would assume that since this issue is so random that it would mean that the valve is not sticking all the time. Is that a correct assumption? Sometimes I can drive a hundred miles without a single issue. Shifts through every year just fine. Other times it starts having shifting issues within the first 5 miles of driving. That's why it's so puzzling to me.
 

rockola1971

Full Access Member
Joined
Dec 29, 2016
Posts
2,605
Reaction score
3,512
Location
Indiana (formerly IL)
If in fact one of the valves are stuck does that mean that the valve body would need to be replaced? Also I would assume that since this issue is so random that it would mean that the valve is not sticking all the time. Is that a correct assumption? Sometimes I can drive a hundred miles without a single issue. Shifts through every year just fine. Other times it starts having shifting issues within the first 5 miles of driving. That's why it's so puzzling to me.
The symptoms mirror either a mechanical/electrical problem with shift solenoid(s) and/or worn valve body. A solenoid can check good cold but become a demon when it gets warmed up but your description of frequency of going into limp mode just doesnt fit that. This wreaks more of a highly worn valve body. I would get yours serviced and rebuilt or order a replacement new/rebuilt valve body.
 
OP
OP
BillHill93

BillHill93

TYF Newbie
Joined
Dec 26, 2023
Posts
13
Reaction score
2
The symptoms mirror either a mechanical/electrical problem with shift solenoid(s) and/or worn valve body. A solenoid can check good cold but become a demon when it gets warmed up but your description of frequency of going into limp mode just doesnt fit that. This wreaks more of a highly worn valve body. I would get yours serviced and rebuilt or order a replacement new/rebuilt valve body.
Thank you sir. You have definitely given me a more definitive direction to look deeper into.
 

NickTransmissions

Sin City
Supporting Member
Joined
Mar 9, 2023
Posts
1,088
Reaction score
2,613
Location
The transmission bench
Thank you sir. You have definitely given me a more definitive direction to look deeper into.
If you haven't already purchased a reman valve body, you can vacuum test yours (or take to it to a transmission shop that has a Sonnax vac test machine) and they can test it, if you want to definitively rule in or out the valve body.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
132,305
Posts
1,865,695
Members
96,894
Latest member
TheShiznit
Top