5 Things that SLOWLY KILL your Automatic Transmission
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- čas přidán 26. 04. 2024
- Yes, you are killing the automatic transmission just be driving it because it has some life expectancy and will not live forever. But why one transmission can go 200-300 thousand miles while the other one will last like 50 thousand miles?
Well, in this video, I will show you 5 important things that are killing your automatic transmission right now. I perfectly know that the majority of drivers will have at least one of these habits and they will regret this when they see the bill from a repair shop after transmission replacement.
The video also gives you several tips on how you can avoid killing your automatic transmission and using it just the way it should be used. These tips will help you prolong the life of the gearbox.
I hope these tips will help you! Subscribe to my channel and get more information on car maintenance and wise driving! - Auta a dopravní prostředky
ALWAYS when parking, put in neutral,apply parking brake, then into park. Get it? Got it,? Good. Do it
Thank you for saying 'parking brake' and not 'emergency brake'.
AT will not overheat while standing in traffic jam. There is no need to put it into park or neutral. The gearbox is designed for such operation, and at idle engine speeds the amount of heat released is not a challenge. You will sooner tire your leg from holding the brake :-)
People still regurgitate this myth? The car's components (read: transmission, driveshaft, engine, etc) have enormous forces pushing against them while driving. The very minor forces pushing against it while in idle are negligible at their worst.
Put it into park or neutral every time will definitely cause much more wear and tear. A automatic transmission (the ones with torque converters, not all autos are the same) literally have active cooling.
The Car Care Nut(Toyota mechanic) advises do not shift to neutral at traffic lights. He says the extra shifting is hard on the transmission. I used to always shift to neutral. No more.
I actually don't advise to shift out of D at traffic lights. Shifting makes sense if you are going to remain stationary for at least 2 minutes or so. Shifting does affect the transmission.
Modern automatics shift to neutral automatically when you've been sat for a few seconds and get into gear when you press the gas, so shifting into neutral is unecessary.
Conventional ones don't do that. Dual-clutch transmissions do. But this doesn't save them from dying prematurely.
Conventional ones don't do that. Dual-clutch transmissions do. But this doesn't save them from dying prematurely.
Oh yea well my Honda tech says to put it in neutral at red lights !……..
Thank you for this. Very informative and well presented 👍🏻
Excellent advice, backed up with reasons and illustrations, for saving your transmission unnecessary wear and failure. Much appreciate you making this video.
Yes! Finally someone who said exactly what my brother told me years ago! He has been a transmission technician since te 80s until recently. All he ever did was performance rebuilding on Automatic transmission and differentials. And also older model cars you can shift manually unless its computer controlled like a 4L60E!
I concur on all points, but don't just drain and fill the ATF, but drop the pan and replace the filter and clean the sludge out of the pan.
Good point!
Did this guy play a Russian gangster on The Sopranos?
Nope )
Yes
I had no idea my wheels could sleep! Thanks for the info
😂😂😂
This what comes to my mind at first. What the hell are sleeping wheels? haha
there are magnetics into the chamber of atf transmissions which catch all tiny debris of friction.
Magnets will only catch ferrite particules from gears, not dust, clumps, clutch pack particles, moisture, etc.
Just put it in neutral at stop lights
Don’t slam it back in drive and drive off
Anticipating light slip back in gear gives pump chance get pressure back up
180000 on my 2001 Silverado original tranny no problems
Do regular oil changes
Exactly...when the light turns green without your foot on the brake put it back in gear. Drive away. Been doing that since I was a kid never any trans issues. The other major benefit of that is with that tiny put it in gear delay you are then not the first guy crossing the intersection so some maniac chasing the yellow will not T bone you. He'll T Bone the guy who punches it at the green.
New sub from Arizona, I can tell these will be good.
TLDW: Things that kill your automatic transmission - Everything involved in driving your car basically.
How does someone make a transmission sleep?
My own list:
Changing directions when still moving
Driving uphill for a very long time with slipping torque converter
Towing more than the car is rated for, especially up long or steep hills
Brake torqueing, or pressing the accelerator and brake pedals at the same time while in gear
Taking off from a stop very quickly
Not changing the fluid/filter on time
So I presume using the gear shift selector to gear down often, which I do, will not kill your automatic?
Depends much on the trasnmission. But usually it doesn't do much harm if the car isn't driven too aggressively.
Good info.
It has ben said to change all fluid every 30000-40000 miles and filter . CZcams Channel - One Road and ? show disconnecting hoses from transmission cooler . One hose into container with new fluid to suction up and force old fluid out the other hose into a container , vehicle running of course . Rather than a " flush machine " which has a high pressure . Amsoil is said to be the best .
Neutral drops - poor man’s stall speed torque converter.
I do change my transmission fluid. However never "flush' it. To many horror stories.
Good Information
so I should knock it into neutral when stuck in line at the drive-through?
If it's more than 2 minutes, yes, I would certainly shift out of D.
#5 this is something that happens to me all the time at an upward incline but i never knew what it was . So he's saying that when parking at an incline engage the E-brake, then disengage the E-brake after you shift out of Park?
Engage the e-brake when parked before you release the brake pedal. Release the e-brake anytime before driving when you are already pressing the brake pedal.
I have a new Subaru impreza with CVT transmission. All new Subaru's have Stop/Start which cuts engine when foot is on brake when stopped. This obviously disengages the Transmission. Thus this feature should never be disabled as many people are doing cause they don't like it. In the past I thought it was normal to stop your automatic car and keep the motor going and leave it in drive. If it was stopped too long I would put it in neutral. Seems the Stop/Start feature is saving the CVT transmission. Correct??
Yes, start stop will prolong the life of the CVT a little. But the video is more about conventional transmissions. CVTs mainly fail due to dirty fluid, towing, or just mileage/age.
@TopicMotor if they mainly fail due to dirty oil, shouldn't the oil change be at least at 60,000k instead of 120,000k?
Is it km or miles? I would change it once every 40-60k miles (60-90k km).
Add a transmission cooler in front of your radiator you will have to add some more fluid.
This works for a lot of GM transmissions and was almost necessary in the Cruze 1.8L due to bad overheating of the transmission. But it's not possible for every transmission, unfortunately.
is it ok . to put in additives for transmission.
Usually, they may only be a very short-term solution. In a lot of cases, additives give zero effect.
Don't do it. Bad idea.
Good job/video.
But on #3 you stopped and went to the next one without giving the solution.
If you come to a red light, just stay in drive using the brake. If it's something longer, like an accident, a,train, being stopped by a cop; definitely switch to park.
Even consider turning the car off, if you feel it's going to last more than a few minutes.
Even on a major highway, I would use park if the traffic is held up by some major disturbance.
I always put it in neutral rather than park
Don’t want to load up parking pawl
Good video bro
loves from israel
So, if you are in traffic for a while, do you put the car in Park or is Neutral ok?
up to 2 minutes are ok in D. Then, I usually put in P. But there is no difference between P and N - the transmission still goes to neutral. In P, the parking pawl will additionally be applied.
If you're at a red light, just use the brake and stay in drive. If you come to some weird stop, a train, a police check, etc., put the car in park.
@@CurlyFromTheSwirly Actually, if you are somewhere you are going to be sitting for a while and likely to get rear ended such as a drive thru, red light, or railroad crossing, I would suggest putting it in neutral and using the parking brake instead. Getting rear ended with the transmission in park is very bad news for your transmission and drivetrain!
@@averyalexander2303
That's a good idea.
Every situation is different.
Just neutral
I do not agree with thr OP stating that transmission will overheat while in Drive in traffic. That is not true info. Your leg will overheat first before the trans.
Best advice? Calm down and chill out.
3 & 5 aren't going to kill the trans. But thanks for keeping the video short
Spinning the wheels has no negative impact on the friction plates whatsoever. It's in gear, every modern auto box has 100% physical lockup in gear, the friction plates can only get involved during a gear change.
Sitting stationary in D is NEVER going to overheat the transmission. The energy involved in just moving off from stationary is massively, enormously greater, out of all proportion, compared to sitting stationary. If sitting in D genuinely damaged the transmission it would be completely worn out after a single drive round a city in stop start traffic!😂
Hey! Look, if this was true, the car wouldn't move an inch when you are in D and just release the brake. When your car is in D, it's just like you would engage the first gear in a manual transmission and semi-engage the clutch keeping the foot on the brake. It wouldn't move till you stop pressing the brake, but it doesn't mean that the clutch doesn't suffer. Of course, the torque converter friction plates are engaged whenever the car is in D or R. It works otherwise only in some DCT transmissions like DSG in VW.
@@TopicMotor you really need to learn more about this, especially if you are going to give misleading information on CZcams.
1) Buying one
2) Owning one
3) Driving one
4) Using one
5) Having one
If only people could still drive, then they could control their own car, like many people in England still do.
XD
lol what is this guy talking about oh thats right open diffs so the stuck wheel sends power to the wheel with the least resistance... but I also have a triple locked 4runner lol Nitro gears 4.88, the lockers are made by Eaton
Have fun we’ll worry about the consequences later 💀
All of this is common sense to me and in tons of other videos but whatever.
07 5 24, No mechanical empathy ? = No lasting AT !
Keep to a manual transmission. (Most of) us brits do.
Love manual transmissions. But in the US, there are almost no budget-friendly new cars available with them now.
👌
Go manual transmission!
Very very thick Slavic accent
regarding the third Reason
Sorry but youre just worng, read about it in depth
the other reasons are correct
Do you mean going to N or P in traffic jams? This is not recommended by manufacturers and they will tell you - keep it in D all the time. But it's really not good for the torque converter or for the clutch pack in DCT. Not sure about CVTs, but I suspect it's the same.
No, he's absolutely correct.
Though he didn't give a solution.
Some mechanics will tell you the worst thing to do to your tranny is keep your car in drive and keep braking. (At least for an automatic.)
Thing is, cars are made to move, not stay still. That constant application of the brake is what makes city driving 10 or more times the wear & tear on the car.
@TopicMotor
Other than a red light (which sometimes may be programmed to stay longer), you need to shift into park.
People will argue about going into neutral and all that fancy stuff. Just use park if it's a few minutes.
If it's something like a broken train, and it's going to be 10+ minutes, you better shut that vehicle off.
@@TopicMotor I didnt say move trough gears all the time
All I said is that youre worng and it does not harm the tranny to hold the tc on brake
thats what it desinged for !
But a rule of thumb - when youre stopping for a long time, lets say when wating for someone to come - either shut your car off or move to N and lift your parking brake up
I mean, it might cause alittle bit of damage, but to a point where it reachs to a "top 5 things" video? NO
@@CurlyFromTheSwirly youre both worng
Regarding city driving - its bad for many other reasons but not for the one above
pjay3028' comment down below, makes more sense. I don't know who the origonal 'mental midget' was who started the 'don't coast with automatic trasmissions' conspiracy, but in all the 3-4 cars I've owned with auto tranny's, I would coast whenever possible, and however long as possible. All my tranny's have lasted 3-4 times longer than what the auto transmission shop guys have told me. I.E., I bought a 1985 Ford T-Bird right off the showroom floor and 11 years later, with more than 137,000 miles, the tranny finally went out. The shop guy told me it had a 'C-4' tranny that usually gets about 40,000 miles before they go bad.