2002, V70 (ATF Drain) Topic is solved
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Mr. Detail
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Mr. Detail
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Krons, is the method you speak of here "transmission cooler return flush method" different from what I spoke of? Just the sump drain.
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vtl
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Transmission diverts only a small fraction of ATF flow to the cooler, the rest goes back to sump. In my experience the Gibbons method is more messy and more risky (bubbles in ATF is no good for oil pump nor clutch packs), and offers no benefits over drain and fill.Mr. Detail wrote: ↑04 Jan 2024, 07:27 Krons, is the method you speak of here "transmission cooler return flush method" different from what I spoke of? Just the sump drain.
- MoVolvos
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.Mr. Detail wrote: ↑04 Jan 2024, 07:27Krons, is the method you speak of here "transmission cooler return flush method" different from what I spoke of? Just the sump drain.
I believe Kron is referring to the method in the videos. Lost count of how many I've done. If you do a chart on contaminated fluid percentages using the drain and fill method you'll see it's really not beneficial at all.
Every time someone says the flush method will do damage it's I heard or it may, then proceed to give all sorts of reasons why. Never seen an example of damage taking place in an article, post, video etc... Instead of pumping two liters out I've always pump till no fluid comes out of the tube and quickly shut off engine then fill the pan and repeat.
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Blessings,
BKM
2008 C30 T5 2.0 M66
2007 S60 2.5T - New Project
2003 S80 T6 Transmission DIED
2000 S70 SE Base - New Project
1998 S70 T5 Prior
1989 240 Wagon Prior
BKM
2008 C30 T5 2.0 M66
2007 S60 2.5T - New Project
2003 S80 T6 Transmission DIED
2000 S70 SE Base - New Project
1998 S70 T5 Prior
1989 240 Wagon Prior
- Krons
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It is different than the simple sump drain. As shown in the videos, it is pulling the transmission cooler return to run a hose to a jug and use the transmission to pump out about 2 qt at a time. I would not run it dry like some of the videos show.Mr. Detail wrote: ↑04 Jan 2024, 07:27Krons, is the method you speak of here "transmission cooler return flush method" different from what I spoke of? Just the sump drain.
This one shows the transition from dirty to clean fluid on a Volvo.
As the comments show some disagreement on best method—but if the goal is to completely change the fluid (switching brands, etc) I feel this is the most complete way to do it based on the change in fluid color through the process.
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.Krons wrote: ↑05 Jan 2024, 16:04It is different than the simple sump drain. As shown in the videos, it is pulling the transmission cooler return to run a hose to a jug and use the transmission to pump out about 2 qt at a time. I would not run it dry like some of the videos show.Mr. Detail wrote: ↑04 Jan 2024, 07:27Krons, is the method you speak of here "transmission cooler return flush method" different from what I spoke of? Just the sump drain.
This one shows the transition from dirty to clean fluid on a Volvo.
As the comments show some disagreement on best method—but if the goal is to completely change the fluid (switching brands, etc) I feel this is the most complete way to do it based on the change in fluid color through the process.
If there is a concern for running the pan dry for a split second, just remove all the fluid in the pan at the beginning. I have an oil extractor which pretty much removes everything in the pan.
Regardless of method, whether run dry for split second or 2 quarts at a time don't mix 2 quarts of clean with 2 quarts of dirty remaining in the pan at the beginning. At that point you're continuing to dilute the dirty fluid. Remove everything in the pan in the beginning and you'll be adding 2 quarts to clean fluid each time.
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Blessings,
BKM
2008 C30 T5 2.0 M66
2007 S60 2.5T - New Project
2003 S80 T6 Transmission DIED
2000 S70 SE Base - New Project
1998 S70 T5 Prior
1989 240 Wagon Prior
BKM
2008 C30 T5 2.0 M66
2007 S60 2.5T - New Project
2003 S80 T6 Transmission DIED
2000 S70 SE Base - New Project
1998 S70 T5 Prior
1989 240 Wagon Prior
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vtl
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No. Old fluid is dripping to sump from everywhere, you can not prevent that. You'll be adding 2 quarts to new/old mix.MoVolvos wrote: ↑06 Jan 2024, 01:09 Regardless of method, whether run dry for split second or 2 quarts at a time don't mix 2 quarts of clean with 2 quarts of dirty remaining in the pan at the beginning. At that point you're continuing to dilute the dirty fluid. Remove everything in the pan in the beginning and you'll be adding 2 quarts to clean fluid each time.
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vtl I know you disagree but this is my experience…vtl wrote: ↑06 Jan 2024, 07:32No. Old fluid is dripping to sump from everywhere, you can not prevent that. You'll be adding 2 quarts to new/old mix.MoVolvos wrote: ↑06 Jan 2024, 01:09 Regardless of method, whether run dry for split second or 2 quarts at a time don't mix 2 quarts of clean with 2 quarts of dirty remaining in the pan at the beginning. At that point you're continuing to dilute the dirty fluid. Remove everything in the pan in the beginning and you'll be adding 2 quarts to clean fluid each time.
Start by draining 3+’ish quarts and filling sump back up. That first pump out via the cooler return in my experience is filthy with little indication of fresh fluid in it. Like the video I posted shows it progressively gets cleaner.
Logic tells me by only doing a drain and fill process it’ll take more fluid to get it clean. We may disagree but in the end either process works to get fresh fluid into the system.
08 S602.5T/05 XC902.5T/02 S602.4T
08 C702.5T (sold)
05 S402.4i (RIP, timing belt failure)
The non-Swedes:
25 Mazda MX-5 / 17 Frontier Pro-4X / 17 Ford Focus
17 R1200GS / 15 Versys 1000 / 11 DR-Z400S / 07 R1200GSA
08 C702.5T (sold)
05 S402.4i (RIP, timing belt failure)
The non-Swedes:
25 Mazda MX-5 / 17 Frontier Pro-4X / 17 Ford Focus
17 R1200GS / 15 Versys 1000 / 11 DR-Z400S / 07 R1200GSA
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.vtl wrote: ↑06 Jan 2024, 07:32No. Old fluid is dripping to sump from everywhere, you can not prevent that. You'll be adding 2 quarts to new/old mix.MoVolvos wrote: ↑06 Jan 2024, 01:09 Regardless of method, whether run dry for split second or 2 quarts at a time don't mix 2 quarts of clean with 2 quarts of dirty remaining in the pan at the beginning. At that point you're continuing to dilute the dirty fluid. Remove everything in the pan in the beginning and you'll be adding 2 quarts to clean fluid each time.
If you can drain the fluid through a plug in the pan and you empty 3.5 quarts, you'll wind up putting in fresh 3.5 quarts into the empty pan. Now, if you flush through the radiator transmission hose, all 3.5 quarts will be pumped into the system while 3.5 quarts come out of the hose.
There will be dripping from inside the pan but not 2 quarts. Have done so many of these on so many makes. I always flush through an extra 2 quarts of the system capacity but it's usually clean after the 1 extra quart.
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Blessings,
BKM
2008 C30 T5 2.0 M66
2007 S60 2.5T - New Project
2003 S80 T6 Transmission DIED
2000 S70 SE Base - New Project
1998 S70 T5 Prior
1989 240 Wagon Prior
BKM
2008 C30 T5 2.0 M66
2007 S60 2.5T - New Project
2003 S80 T6 Transmission DIED
2000 S70 SE Base - New Project
1998 S70 T5 Prior
1989 240 Wagon Prior
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vtl
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I wrote it perhaps a zillion times here and in other Volvo forums, that heat exchanger gets only a small fraction of all ATF circulating in the system. Everything else goes back to sump. It is not like you take out 2 dirty quarts, put 2 fresh quarts and it never mixes with dirty ATF left in the system. Even if you drain the sump first and refill it with fresh ATF, doing the rest through heat exchanger does not prevent old/new ATF mixing up.MoVolvos wrote: ↑06 Jan 2024, 23:06 If you can drain the fluid through a plug in the pan and you empty 3.5 quarts, you'll wind up putting in fresh 3.5 quarts into the empty pan. Now, if you flush through the radiator transmission hose, all 3.5 quarts will be pumped into the system while 3.5 quarts come out of the hose.
There will be dripping from inside the pan but not 2 quarts. Have done so many of these on so many makes. I always flush through an extra 2 quarts of the system capacity but it's usually clean after the 1 extra quart.
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