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Temperature of the fluid affects the level of the fluid. I did an experiment when I had an Audi Quattro with a ZF 4HP18 trans. I filled a glass bottle with ATF that I drained from my Audi and mark the level with tape at room temp (approx 75F) Since it was winter I left the bottle outside overnight and took a reading of the temp of the ATF (28F) and noted that the fluid level had dropped by quite a bit.
The point of this story is that the trans has to be cold when you re-fill it or the final level will not be accurate, especially if the ATF fluid in the Torque Converter is at the engine operating temp. When I do a fluid change I jack the car up the day before and drain the fluid. I let the car sit overnight and refill the next day. |
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The point of my post is if you drove the car around and then perform the trans drain and refill, since a lot of the ATF is still in the torque converter the ATF temp is well beyond the "range" that is in the procedure. Running the car with a cold engine and trans during the fill procedure will eventually get you to that "range" that is outlined in the procedure. Last edited by upallnight; 12-20-2012 at 09:46 AM. |
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