shannondeese
Member
- 651
- 17
- 18
- Location
- High Springs Fl
My trans is brand new. I just installed it. I’m runnning Allison spec trans fluid.
Steel Soldiers now has a few new forums, read more about it at: New Munitions Forums!
What do you mean "brand new"....as in freshly rebuilt?My trans is brand new. I just installed it. I’m runnning Allison spec trans fluid.
It has more to do with the "age" of the seals. They where using "Viton" seals in Allison's back in 1978. I know as I rebuilt them then. Though "Nitrile" is the most common material. Any oil seal will age, especially in such a harsh environment as a automatic transmission . They become hard and then when you go back to using them on a regular basis they break. It is funny thing. If you keep using a transmission it seems to keep the seals living longer. Then when they sit for long stretches, the seals seem to harden. I'm sure a seal engineer could explain this phenomenon. Could just be since the oil drains back over time they dry out. I do know that oil seals actually absorb oil over time. You can completely clean a oil seal and then put it in a baggie. After a few days you can see oil residue on the seal again.The clutch material can absorb water when using oil, the mechanic that rebuilt mine said, although he didn't say how the water could find the oil to begin with. Apparently it does when vehicles set a lot. I think the bigger problem is old seals on the clutch pistons, especially that 4th and reverse clutch pack. They say the new seals don't have the same problem, which makes a fresh rebuild more desirable that a canned NOS tranny that has the older seals. Have fun!
We get it, advertisements are annoying!
Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website like our supporting vendors. Their ads help keep Steel Soldiers going. Please consider disabling your ad blockers for the site. Thanks!