I want to understand what
@nonickatall and
@NickTransmissions are saying. Scenario:
I was in and ran shops for 35+ years. I have seen a vehicle come in the shop for a second opinion of a recommended transmission flush for aged and dirty fluid and after a road test it was determined that the auto transmission functioned fine, shifted as it should and after talking to the owner, they said the same and was just in for an engine oil change and the previous shop had presented him with the transmission flush recommendation.
We agreed that the fluid was dirty looking, light brownish color and the owner did not know the last time the fluid and filter had been done. He trusted our shop and the recommendation was bothering him so he asked us to do the filter change and the fluid flush. We did it and within a week, the shifting norms changed and vehicle was back in the shop with even worse looking fluid than when it was originally offered to us the week before.
To be fair, I myself had cautioned the owner of the flush because I had heard, I am not an auto transmission specialist, from transmission friends in the business that doing a flush can at times be a shock to the clutches and cause later problems. This scenario was repeated at least a half dozen times in my career in shops. Each time a pre flush road test was done and each time the owner said the transmission gave them no concern except that they were warned of dirty fluid.
Are you saying that each time the transmission was actually in the middle of failing and the owner and shop tech did not know it or feel it? I just gotta know because I still do work on the side and have done a few transmission services but have not done and will not be doing any flushes here.
Let's go at it logically, what do we have in an automatic transmission, that comes into contact with oil?
We have the clutches, that have a metal side and a friction lining. These carry out the actual shifting processes and wear out due to the brief friction during shifting.
Then of course we have bearings from the shafts, mostly they are needle bearings, or plain bearings, then we have gears from the planet wheels and, in front-wheel drive vehicles, from differentials, that are integrated into the automatic transmissions. And we have the valve block in which usually some pistons or valves work which are controlled by a solenoid or by solenoid valves which actually control the flow of oil to the clutch pistons.
The bearings and the clutches in particular suffer from old oil, because the old oil changes the coefficient of friction of the clutches and the clutches wear out more. That is also why you notice that an automatic transmission shifts hard, when it has old oil.
And the lubrication is reduced, so it's bad for the bearing and pistons in the valve body.
And as I said, the abrasion from the clutches is constantly being pumped through the automatic transmission and ends up in all channels, pistons and so on.
And then you have the seals of the case the pan and additionally axle seals.
What exactly should happen there or how should it be that the old oil protects the gearbox and the new oil destroys it?
From a technical view I don't see any reason. And as I said before, in the engine you have also plain bearings, and seals and axle seals. They are made of the same material like in the automatic transmission, why you should make and oil change of the engine as often as you like and its good for your engine and at the transmission it should be bad to change the oil?
Incidentally, General Motors also stipulates that the transmission should have a transmission oil change, I think every 45,000 miles.
In Germany we have quite funny situations, e.g. BMW who install ZF transmissions says that their transmissions have lifelong oil filling, and if you ask ZF the manufacturer, they say you should change the oil every 60,000 km. BMW does this in Germany, because in Germany the cars are judged by business people, based on the cost per kilometer driven and if such, an oil change is not done or long-life oils are used, which i don't think much of either, then that lowers the costs and leaves the car cost to look good.
I think if you watch the life from a new transmission until the failure on let's say 200,000 miles the situation that in the beginning when the car is in guarantee and regular service, the oil is changed every 45,000 miles that don't lead into damaged transmission, then probably comes situation where the car was spot used was not treated well, probably by a young men made many kick downs didn't change oil and then after a while the people who drive then the car think, now we can make a service. But if your clutches are worn, your unit will fail someday. Probably it's a psychological thing that people have the feeling I did not do a proper service for my car and the drive very carefully and when they make the service, they think now I have guarantee, everything is okay, I can drive normally make kick down or big asseleration.
And that give the transmission the rest...
So in my in my garage experience I didn't have the experience that people have more damaged units when they make an oil change.
And with the best will in the world, I can't think of any technical reasons, why this should be the case.