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Volvo 850 Transmission Replacement Tutorial

Help, Advice and DIY Tutorials on Volvo's P80 platform cars -- Volvo's 1990s "bread and butter" cars -- powered by the ubiquitous and durable Volvo inline 5-cylinder engine.

1992 - 1997 850, including 850 R, 850 T-5R, 850 T-5, 850 GLT
1997 - 2000 S70, S70 AWD
1997 - 2000 V70, V70 AWD
1997 - 2000 V70-XC
1997 - 2004 C70

This topic is in the MVS Volvo Repair Database » 1995 Volvo 850 Transmission replacement
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whoa
Posts: 461
Joined: 30 July 2008
Year and Model: 850 Turbo Wagon 1996
Location: san francisco
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Re: Volvo 850 Transmission Replacement Tutorial

Post by whoa »

I've been hoping for a good walkthrough on this job, and lo and behold Matt comes up with an astounding one. Thanks for the superb work!

I have a RMS leak, and I've had the parts for this for well over a year. Even built an engine support and a transmission cradle to fit on my floor jack. Seeing this write-up is sobering, though, and I'm starting to think maybe the leak isn't all THAT bad.
1996 850 Turbo Wagon

wheelsup
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Post by wheelsup »

whoa wrote:I've been hoping for a good walkthrough on this job, and lo and behold Matt comes up with an astounding one. Thanks for the superb work!

I have a RMS leak, and I've had the parts for this for well over a year. Even built an engine support and a transmission cradle to fit on my floor jack. Seeing this write-up is sobering, though, and I'm starting to think maybe the leak isn't all THAT bad.
I hear ya. Just took it for 400 mile round trip no oil that I can find thank god! It's nice to not have that RMS leak anymore. I do have a jerry rigged setup that takes crankcase pressure from my dipstick tube and routes it under the car - now that I know the leak is gone I can work on routing that into the intake manifold or try what someone else suggested and use bigger tubing into the PCV system (posted recently). Just a good feeling!
1995 850 GLT Wagon w/ 200,000 miles

Nob00st
Posts: 1
Joined: 9 March 2014
Year and Model: 1995 854 GLT
Location: Raleigh NC USA

Post by Nob00st »

wheelsup, it's funny - I've been looking around for a DIY on how to replace a trans (I just got a 95 GLT that needs a new trans soon) and found this post - and I too live in Raleigh!

Thank you for the guide!

Barnett
Posts: 1
Joined: 30 December 2015
Year and Model: 1997 850 GLT Wagon
Location: Vancouver B.C

Post by Barnett »

Hey wheelsup!

I just joined to thank you for this write up!!! I am going to undertake this with an 850 wagon. I just purchased it and then it developed a pretty good RMS leak. Thanks for a great very detailed write up!
97' 850 GLT Wagon, 275000kms

wheelsup
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Post by wheelsup »

Barnett wrote:Hey wheelsup!

I just joined to thank you for this write up!!! I am going to undertake this with an 850 wagon. I just purchased it and then it developed a pretty good RMS leak. Thanks for a great very detailed write up!
You're welcome!
1995 850 GLT Wagon w/ 200,000 miles

vjaneczko
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Post by vjaneczko »

I know it's been a few years but I'm wondering if you recall disconnecting the evap hose, the one that runs from the canister down along the front of the subframe, then behind the front engine mount and between subframe and sway bar. Do you happen to remember if it gets disconnected at the canister or behind the swaybar? I don't want to yank on it at the wrong spot!
"He attacked everything in life with a mix of extraordinary genius and naive incompetence, and it was often difficult to tell which was which." - Douglas Adams

1997 855 GLT - R.I.P.
2006 S60R - For ME!

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greg850r
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Post by greg850r »

Does anyone know if the clutch fork can be removed without separating the engine and tranny. Anyone got a picture of the part itself? I can't seem to find one online.

Thanks
05 Cross Country wagon
99 C70 Convertible
96 850R wagon
96 850T wagon
96 850 GLT 5spd N/A sedan -wrecked, ouch
97 850R 5spd sedan
66 GTO 421SD 4spd
67 GTO 455 T400
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85 Yota 4x4 (2)
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lrwagon96
Posts: 2
Joined: 4 December 2021
Year and Model: 1996 855 HP
Location: Long Island NY

Post by lrwagon96 »

Thanks so much for the insight and convincing evidence that the damaged flywheel will likely remain in the car as I'm reluctant to bring it to a shop for seven hours of work (over $1,000) and $400 for a new flywheel doesn't make too much sense for my 30 year old 850 turbo wagon. Still, knowing how it should be done is really helpful to confirm that the shop did it right.

If only I had a garage to take the car apart, tools more than I can afford (although I did buy a 30mm socket and 1/2" socket wrench to move the crank 5' to the next set of teeth), and days to commit to the task.

Great wrote up!

Gary D, NYC

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abscate
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Post by abscate »

I’m in port Jeff area if you get motivated to pull the engine. I’ve got an engine puller
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foggydogg
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Post by foggydogg »

lrwagon96 wrote: 27 Jun 2025, 15:51 Thanks so much for the insight and convincing evidence that the damaged flywheel will likely remain in the car as I'm reluctant to bring it to a shop for seven hours of work (over $1,000) and $400 for a new flywheel doesn't make too much sense for my 30 year old 850 turbo wagon. Still, knowing how it should be done is really helpful to confirm that the shop did it right.

If only I had a garage to take the car apart, tools more than I can afford (although I did buy a 30mm socket and 1/2" socket wrench to move the crank 5' to the next set of teeth), and days to commit to the task.

Great wrote up!

Gary D, NYC
850, Turbo, Wagon, and Manual aren't words that go together very often in the States. Unless the car has lots of salt worm rot, it likely deserves another chance. Dr. Abscate would be a fine fellow to get to know.
69 1800s, @500k Death by Rust
94 850 Turbo, T-boned, ambulance for me, crusher for it
97 855 T5, 855 R projects
98 V70R x2, Silver Junkyard rescue, Coral Red
98 V70GLT x2, parts cars
00 V70xc x2, both now dead
62 122s, gone to live in Richmond
56 445 Duett basket project
1950 Studebaker 2R10 flatbed, T9 crashbox

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