Mac
Well-Known Member
Just adding some info from changing the fluid on my wife's MDX, it has a ZF 9 speed, the fluid costs around $30 a quart, for the MDX it is a drain and refill, no flush, no pan drop at 50k miles.
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How many quarts did the MDX take?Just adding some info from changing the fluid on my wife's MDX, it has a ZF 9 speed, the fluid costs around $30 a quart, for the MDX it is a drain and refill, no flush, no pan drop at 50k miles.
It was around 3.5 quarts, there is no way to measure it like a dipstick so I drained it out into a large plastic pitcher, marked it at the level then emptied the pitcher and filled it with clean fluid and put it back in, it did have a easy to access drain plug and the fill port was on top of the trans not the side making it easy to access and fill back up.How many quarts did the MDX take?
I'd be curious to know how much comes out of a Gladiator if you just drain it.
It has an internal filter that has 2 10mm nuts holding it in place on the internal side of the tranny pan. You have to purchase the pan, gasket and 13 fasteners to do a tranny service if your pan doesn’t have a drain plug or maybe just draining it isn’t good enough and you want to change the filter, then you’re buying the pan kit. About $250 cad.So then the flush/fill vs drain/fill becomes a question of economics and time.
The filter is in the pan. To do a flush as
We all know the engineering truism that perfect is the enemy of good.
I'm pulling these prices out of thin air because I have no idea what a flush/fill costs.
but if I can do a drain/fill for $25 and do it twice for for $50. (change oil, drive the car for a day, drain and fill again) and a flush/fill costs $300 then the choice is obvious to me.
If the Flush/fill cost $100 well then its different. my time is worth something.
Please excuse my ignorance on this one question - does the AT on a pentastar Gladiator have an external filter? Any filter of any kind?
Thanks
Back in the early 70s I already had my own small engine shop - and did automotive work on the side and at a former AMC dealership shop. I was doing work on almost everything - Opel, Rambler, Triumph, Ford, Chevy, whatever. I was also in high school. The auto shop and machine shop instructors knew me pretty well - and since I was already authorized to do warranty work for Peerless, Jacobsen, B&S, and Tecumseh, I was given a "pass" on the intro mechanics class. I got credit for and skipped the second level automotive class by sitting with the instructor and explaining all of the hydraulic circuits and power flow operation on a C6 automatic, as well as explaining in detail the operation of multiple carburetors including the Holley 4bbl.Back when I worked as a used car tech at a Saab/Subaru dealer we had exactly this problem. (I know nearly nothing about how ATs work. All those oil galleys immediately put my ADHD brain into melt down. Ha. )
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We got in a fancy flush machine and the service writers started pushing this service. It was a new way to make money.
Saabs and Subarus tended to last a long time. (Subarus lasted forever if they didn't rust out first) and we started flushing 100k mile cars and problems almost instantly surfaced. We stopped providing the service to cars that were high mile and had never had the service done.
Why would you do that? Just drain and clean and put things back, fill it and be done.but if I can do a drain/fill for $25 and do it twice for for $50. (change oil, drive the car for a day, drain and fill again) and a flush/fill costs $300 then the choice is obvious to me.
Ford got rid of the converter drain plug, I assume. To me the biggest issue with transmission fluid changes is that you still have quarts of fluid in the converter. Granted, with your frequency of changes - that's a non-issue!I plain on servicing the transmission on my JT at 50-60 K. It may be over kill but if it makes me feel better its all good. That said I have a 03 F250 servicing the trans every 30K after seeing that "service" only replaced 6 quarts of fluid and the truck has a drain plug on the trans I have at every oil change drained and filled the trans. I do not know if this has helped the truck but it is close to 300K on the transmission with no issues.
I was just suggesting doing it twice as a counter to flushing it.Why would you do that? Just drain and clean and put things back, fill it and be done.
Let it drain for more than a few minutes, if there's a converter drain, drain it, but I see no need for a second time unless you pull out really really nasty fluid.
If you haven't waited too long, if it's not burned and/or cruddy with a lot of debris........... one and done would be fine. You aren't flushing it that way, just diluting more of the old fluid - which if not burned or hasn't been overheated, is still fine.
For a pan drain, just drill and tap? or do you put a Helicoil in??Ford got rid of the converter drain plug, I assume. To me the biggest issue with transmission fluid changes is that you still have quarts of fluid in the converter. Granted, with your frequency of changes - that's a non-issue!
After the first time or two of transmission fluid up to my armpits servicing transmissions with no pan drain - I started putting drains in every transmission pan that didn't have one, and same for most torque converters (although that can be a lot more tricky in some cases)
If that F250 had a converter drain plug it would be wonderful. Not having your level of experience I would never think of trying to install one. I try to know my limits, on ATs dropping the pan replacing filter and fluid it about it.Ford got rid of the converter drain plug, I assume. To me the biggest issue with transmission fluid changes is that you still have quarts of fluid in the converter. Granted, with your frequency of changes - that's a non-issue!
After the first time or two of transmission fluid up to my armpits servicing transmissions with no pan drain - I started putting drains in every transmission pan that didn't have one, and same for most torque converters (although that can be a lot more tricky in some cases)
Most Dealerships cannot get new inventory and have little stock to sell. They're doing everything they can to keep the doors open, including uncharging for unasked for options,, adding "scarcity" price to the List Price, and coming up with new ways to take your money in the service department with things like a flyer recommending nonexistent service intervals.At my 15K service the dealer added a flyer with my paperwork that included a bunch of service recommendations for the next (20K) service. It had a bunch of stuff on it including a transmission fluid flush and other assorted stuff that totaled to a whopping $1000 plus bucks.
WTF? Is this just stealership shenanigans or are these actual manufacturer recommended services? I’m suspecting the former…
So $470 for engine and cabin filter and a brake fluid flush that is not needed? That seems super high $$ to me.I got my 20000 service today. (I was actually at 26000) fir some reason when I was at 20000 in TX they only did the normal oil change?!
Anywhoo I took it to my local dealer, and they did the normal oil change and 5 tire rotation as well as changed the engine and cabin air filters and flushed the brake fluid.
They didn’t do my front rear differential but suggested I get it done at my next oil change, said it’s a “little” dark.
It was my last Jeep Wave “free” oil change snd it cost me $470!!!
they had to replace one of my “sound bar” speakers it had rattled out of its casing?! And I needed a software update, my infotainment system (already been replaced) was glitching...all under warranty.
I feel like $470 was steep but maybe I’m wrong?!
Did the service advisor say what the moisture reading was in your brake fluid to recommend a flush? I had my 20k km brakes serviced and they just cleaned and greased the callipers. Pads just at 12mm. $170 cad.I got my 20000 service today. (I was actually at 26000) fir some reason when I was at 20000 in TX they only did the normal oil change?!
Anywhoo I took it to my local dealer, and they did the normal oil change and 5 tire rotation as well as changed the engine and cabin air filters and flushed the brake fluid.
They didn’t do my front rear differential but suggested I get it done at my next oil change, said it’s a “little” dark.
It was my last Jeep Wave “free” oil change snd it cost me $470!!!
they had to replace one of my “sound bar” speakers it had rattled out of its casing?! And I needed a software update, my infotainment system (already been replaced) was glitching...all under warranty.
I feel like $470 was steep but maybe I’m wrong?!