Frenchy
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Chris
- Joined
- Mar 15, 2020
- Threads
- 164
- Messages
- 7,543
- Reaction score
- 10,752
- Location
- Elizabeth, Colorado
- Vehicle(s)
- 2012 Nissan Frontier, 1994 F150 XL, 2022 Ford Transit
- Occupation
- Field Service Technician
No need to worry. I'm used to my Frontier running much cooler in most conditions(with the exception of OffRoad Travel) where the transmission likes to ride 150°-160° F. Mind you the normal operating temperature for Nissan Automatic Transmissions is between 122°-176° F. of course I get to see the Torque Converter Outlet Temperature and the Pan Temperature at the same time. Watching both have certainly shown how the Transmission Temperature is affected greatly by how one is driving in different situations.I have accepted that Ford is ok with 220F but it was weird considering our old 2016 Honda Pilot AWD would rarely break 200F towing the same trailer we have and that had a ZF 9 speed. I think the hottest I ever saw was like 210F maybe? Meanwhile in stop and go I can get 210F in the Ranger during the summer. Towing 220-230F seems normal the same trailer.
Funny enough, the flying wrenches guy (I think) showed a tear down of a 10R80 they were rebuilding due to all these 10R80 issues and the clutches looked new. Was something like a 100k trans too. He said they usually don't replace the clutches and mentioned the CDF drum and valve body as the main issues.
He does make his own parts though
https://nextgendiesel.com/collections/10r80-transmissions-transmission-parts
Just think the $10k 10R80 plus $4k core charge is a bit excessive for the Ranger.
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