- 1999 V6 Transmission Grit
- Posted by Honda-Man
I noticed some hesitation when accelerating. My dad said it might be the
transmission. Now the car has 124,000 miles and has never had the
transmission fluid changed. When I checked the transmission fluid there was
some grit on the stick, the oil was brownish red, and felt more like motor
oil. Any thoughts on the condition of the fluid?
- Posted by EdV
Did the A/T oil smelled burned?
On Dec 30, 6:24 pm, "Honda-Man" <wchaas...@verizon.net> wrote:
- Posted by m Ransley
Do you ever change your engine oil? How about your clothes. By now you
should of had maybe 4 changes, people like you amaze me.
- Posted by toyomoho
If only brown you may be OK. Best to change the fluid now, a good DIY
job. Just drain and replace, then do it again in another say few
hundred miles. If still dark, do it again.
--
toyomoho
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- Posted by m Ransley
Drop the pan, change the filter, do it right you obviously have
neglected the car to death. get a manual and follow it for once.
- Posted by Justa Lurker
toyomoho wrote:
I think someone asked this before, but I never saw the answer.....when
you change auto transmission fluid (on say, 95 Camry or 99 Camry) ----
(1) What size wrench to use on drain plug ?
(2) What size/type of drain plug gasket is required ?
in order to have on hand before beginning the job.
Thanks !
- Posted by Jason James
"Honda-Man" <wchaasiii@verizon.net> wrote in message
news:%bFlh.957$kB3.956@trnddc08...
Automatic transmissions dump all their clutch and band wear material into
the oil. There's often some metal as well from the drums which the bands
brake against on gear-changes. It is very important to change the ATF
(Automatic Transmission Fluid) before it changes color too much. Yours is
way past that, so it's urgent. Having said that, hesitation on accelerating
is likely more an engine management problem or an ignition or fuel related
fault, as transmissions causing that symptom would also be making expensive
noises IMHE.
Jason
- Posted by
"m Ransley" <ransley@webtv.net> wrote in message
news:10210-4597551D-165@storefull-3132.bay.webtv.net...
Amen...It is hard to fathom that some people abuse their vehicles this way.
- Posted by EdV
I agrre with jason. Hesitation maybe a result of a number of things,
judging from your post I would imagine you only add gasoline on your
car to keep it going and nothing more. There maybe other reasons and
not A/T fluid alone, but nonetheless you should change it now.
Another thing, the 2007 Owners manual say that you only have to change
A/T fluid if your driving under heavy conditions regardles of the
mileage. I think that's hard to believe?!
On Dec 31, 8:39 am, "Jason James" <h...@work.1.0> wrote:
- Posted by Honda-Man
All - you have been very helpful and I understand my next weekend's
activity.
"Honda-Man" <wchaasiii@verizon.net> wrote in message
news:%bFlh.957$kB3.956@trnddc08...
- Posted by johngdole@hotmail.com
It's way overdue for the ATF change. You should consider changing the
strainer as well. Don't just clean the strainer. A mesh screen inside a
casing can't effectively be cleaned. Use a $20 Fram ATF kit that comes
with a cork rubber gasket (not the recycled rubber tire kind). Add the
amount of Dexron III you drain out. Make sure the fluid is at the
correct level. Don't forget to drain the differential as well.
Honda-Man wrote:
- Posted by EdV
After checking the level from the stick, Step on the brakes and shift
the gear from Park to Low several times and then check the level again.