Install an external transmission oil cooler
Difficulty Level (Easy, Medium, Hard, Insane):
Medium
Process:
When the van transmission started shifting hard and giving me the P1811 code (particularly when the engine warmed up) I knew I'd have to replace the EPC solenoid which I did later (Tranny Fix) but until all the parts got here I wanted to install a tranny oil cooler to alleviate the symptoms.
It ended up working out quite well because the oil line was close to being rusted through so that would have become an issue sooner or later.
The process was pretty simple: Finding the tranny oil return line, cut it, connect one of the external oil cooler lines to one side and the other line to the one that went back to the transmission.
Pictures:
The $4000 scan tool at Mr. Transmission showing the P1811 code |
The rusted line after I took it off and cut it |
The $60 oil cooler on my work bench |
The return line that goes back into the tranny has been removed |
The cooler mounted in front of the radiator |
Using the double/bubble flare tool to put a little lip into the oil line so the rubber hose won't slip off |
The piece that goes from the main radiator to the external oil cooler |
This picture shows the rubber hose coming from the external oil cooler connected to the steel line that goes back to the transmission |
The oil line connected to the transmission again |
Tools:
Pipe cutter
Double/bubble flare kit
Side cutters
Wrenches
Screwdriver
Materials:
Tranny oil cooler
Cost:
$60.00
Time:
3hr
Savings:
Not sure how much they would have charged me to install, but I'm guessing $130 bucks or so
Conclusion:
It definitely helped in keeping the oil temperature down and prevented the hard shifts 90% of the time.
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