Jim has held many titles
in his 12 years at Certified Transmission.
He’s been a service writer, diagnostician, helped run Certified shops,
and has now been a part of the warranty team for almost 10 years.
Our company sells hundreds of wholesale carry-out units, as
well as performing thousands of in-house installations. Our talented team of technical advisers
provides guidance for both types of installs, and we’ve found a number of
common issues that installers face on a daily basis. In Part 2 of this series,
we will be exploring the remaining 6 top install problems we encounter.
5. Power and Grounds
The GM trucks with 4L60E and 4L80E transmissions seem to
frequently have power supply issues.
Defective ignition switches are the normal cause of the problem, and we have
seen a few vehicles with aftermarket products incorrectly wired into the power
supply circuit for the transmission. We
suspect that many transmissions have been misdiagnosed and sold for symptoms
created by the bad ignition switches, as we have had several calls immediately
after install reporting a concern identical to the unit that was just replaced. GM TSB 01-07-30-002A goes back to 1997, but
we have seen the problem in 1994 models. The TSB has been updated to
01-07-30-002E to 2005 models, so it affects a lot of vehicles on the road
today.
We have had several calls on Toyota vehicles that won’t
start, won’t shift, and wrong gear starts right after installation of a
replacement transmission. A poor ground connection
at the transmission case is often the cause, and sometimes at the battery
ground also. We have seen similar
concerns in other vehicle makes, also.
The most prone vehicles are power-side controlled systems, where the
PCM/TCM sends voltage to the solenoid being controlled and the solenoids are permanently
grounded to the valve body. With this
type of control system, ground cables are connected directly to the transmission
case. These ground cable connections are
often used for PCM/TCM return signals, so they must be clean and secure.
All power and ground connections must be clean and free of
excessive resistance. Since the battery
is usually disconnected when installing a unit, clean the connections before connecting
them.
6. Engine Sensors
Engine sensors have a big impact on transmission
performance. MAF, TPS, oxygen sensors, knock
sensors, and coolant sensors are all potential trouble for the transmission’s
correct operation.
We had a 2002 Buick Century with a freshly-installed,
remanufactured 4T65E. It had slow, soft
upshifts, and if heavy throttle was applied, it would slip. It wasn’t driven long enough to set GRE
codes, but it would have set codes if driven for any amount of distance. The installer was an industry veteran at a
quality shop, so I sent him a replacement unit based on his own diagnosis. After installing the replacement unit, it had
the same problems as the unit just removed. He installed a pressure gauge and
found that the unit had no line rise with increased engine load. He connected a scanner and manually controlled
the PC solenoid, and the pressures stayed in spec with each increased pressure
command. After replacing the MAF sensor,
the unit worked as designed. The engine
did not have any drivability concerns, and no DTC’s set. Because the MAF was bad, incorrect load
calculations from the PCM were causing a slip condition.
Engine coolant temperature sensors can cause 518/618 units
to go in and out of lock-up if they fluctuate around 160 degrees, where TCC
engagement is allowed on. The same
vehicles can have a no upshift complaint, or incorrect gear starts if the
oxygen sensor ground is lost or contaminated.
The governor solenoid and the O2 sensors share grounds.
We recently had a 2000 Lexus RX300 that didn’t have 4th
gear immediately after install. After
hours of unsuccessful diagnosis, it was discovered that the exhaust manifold
was leaking near a knock sensor, and caused the PCM to inhibit the shift. These same vehicles will not shift to 4th
gear if a knock sensor code is present.
Improper TPS signals will affect multiple vehicles causing them
to have soft or harsh upshifts, engagements, early shifts, slipping lock-up
clutches, and shuddering.
7. Performance modifications
Applying modifications that result in a large increase to
engine performance, but without modifying the transmission, is nearly always
going to end up badly. The easily-added
performance chip, download, or module can add up to 100 or more HP and torque
to an engine, but the factory has the original programming tuned to protect the
OE transmission from damage. When that
protection is removed, it usually ends badly for a stock-level transmission,
but if the repairs are done correctly with the knowledge of the modification,
it can be very profitable. Be careful of
these vehicles because without that knowledge it can be a costly mistake for
the repair shop.
8. Converter bolts
Proper installation and usage of converter bolts is critical
to avoiding a major failure. We have had
units returned with converter dimpling problems from 4L60E units, all Chrysler units,
Toyota units, KM models, and most recently a rash of AW55-51SN units in both
Nissan and Volvo applications. Just the
slightest dimple in the converter cover will eventually cause a clutch failure
to occur. We have seen it happen anywhere from 10 to 7000 miles of use and the end
results are always the same. Verify that
the correct, OE-spec bolts are used in all mounting holes since it only takes
one incorrect bolt to cause failure. Also, use a torque wrench when tightening
the converter bolts.
9. Seals
A remanufactured or rebuilt unit is going to have all new
seals installed, preferably with the best quality available. All seals should be installed with alignment
tools that keep them straight and in alignment, and if it is a metal-clad seal
the metal portion should be sealed to the case and the proper tool that sets
them to the correct depth. A word of
caution: inspect yokes and axles carefully for damage and wear before
installing them, and be careful not to bang into them when installing a unit.
10. Cooler cleaning and contamination
Proper cooler cleaning is a problem for the remanufacturing
industry. Not so much with professional
transmission shop installations, but more so with the general repair shops that
do not have access to the proper equipment needed for modern vehicle cooler
flushing.
Another problem we see often is fluid contamination originating
from dirty coolers, and intrusion through the vents. Ford has issued TSB 05-23-7 for 1999-2003
Windstar, and 2004-2006 Freestar vehicles for water getting into the units through
the vent. Water is routed from the
cowl under the windshield and ends up in the transmission vent. The cowl requires modification to correct the
condition, and I would also suggest adding a hose to the vent to relocate it
and have it face downward, if possible. We
have seen many units damaged from water intrusion both in cores, and returned
failed units.
---
As usual, more great tips from Certified Transmission in Omaha. I think all of these top 10 tips should be published in all General Repair trade magazines for those shops who install remans.
ReplyDelete