TJC
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Tony
- Joined
- Aug 28, 2020
- Threads
- 45
- Messages
- 3,956
- Reaction score
- 9,940
- Location
- North Carolina
- Vehicle(s)
- 93 Miata, 05 Ranger 4x4, 20 Ranger 4x4, 23 CX-5
- Thread starter
- #16
I have the pressure numbers from yesterday and today, and will watch the pressure rise over the next couple of days to determine if the correlation is great enough to warrant monitoring it as well. I hope that it is not as that may be a bridge too far in complexity. I am looking for a heuristic, a rule of thumb in the 90th percentile of accuracy. If I am a 1/10th of a quart off I won't care.I find this interesting. I like data. Although I am not sure what we are going to learn. Perhaps a way to make accurate and consistent static fluid level checks? Are you also recording pressure? I think that would be important.
But I have noticed that it doesn't take a lot of fluid to move the level up the dipstick once you are close. And that is what concerns me. I am looking for accuracy without measuring fluid temperatures at 206F to 215F.
I started thinking about this after watching the FordTechMakuloco video Ford 10R80 Ten Speed Transmission: Fluid and Filter Service Procedure
I followed his procedure as a test. My ambient temps were a 30F - 40F lower (My detached work garage is not climate controlled) than his heated garage, and I noticed my fluid level appeared low. This is what started my train of thought rolling.
Does his simple drain and fill 5-6 quarts, start the truck, shift through the gears at 10 second duration, then fill to the block below the target level specified in the manual hold true in significantly colder or warmer temperatures?
So now you have the back story.
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