School started the last week of August and my sons have something every weekend now so all trips with our camper are done for the year. Seemed like a good time to do some work on the truck; odometer reads just under 10,000 miles. Placed an order for filters from Geno’s Garage – at the door step in no time.
My son and I changed the oil – very easy with the drain valve and proper tools (I have another thread on this).
We also changed the fuel filter – sooner than scheduled, but a good time to do so when doing other stuff and I don’t see how it can hurt to change sooner. I used the revised FleetGuard 3 micron filter and took advantage of the pricing anomaly at Geno’s.
How do you inspect the inside of the fuel filter housing – with a mirror and flashlight? I sure couldn’t
get my body positioned up over the top of it to see down.
Do you clean the inside of the filter housing? How? It would not be good to wipe out with a rag
would it? Do you leave the drain open and rinse with clean fuel?
I notice the cap on the fuel filter housing is plastic. Are there problems rounding off the corners of
the molded-in nut on the top? Should I order a spare for the “boony box”?
Also a good time to install the PML deep capacity transmission pan I had ordered. I don’t know that this was really needed after further reading of the TDR and this website. But, I figure the increase in fluid capacity (adds four quarts) and whatever cooling is offered by the finned aluminum pan cannot hurt. I replaced both filters while I was doing. Geno’s includes directions regarding the extra care that must be taken with the neck gasket on the sump filter as does the TDR article. I used the cooling line drain method as described in the TDR article to change as much transmission fluid as possible.
I don’t think the TDR article does a really good job of describing exactly how to determine whether
the transmission has been refilled properly. I did a web search and found a good article on the 68RFE
that describes really well here: http://www.atraonline.com/gears/2010/2010-05/2010_5_4.pdf.
Note especially Figure 2 that charts where on the dipstick the fluid should be as the fluid
Temperature varies.
Does anyone know how sensitive the transmission is to the proper fluid fill? I messed with this for a
long time and have checked a half dozen times since and It looks right, but I see no way to be precise.
If I understand it correctly then it looks to me like you don’t have to be perfect and there is kind of a
range. Is that correct?
Finally, I tightened everything as I worked. I am thinking that it would be worthwhile to invest in a good torque wrench. Does that make sense?
Thanks!
My son and I changed the oil – very easy with the drain valve and proper tools (I have another thread on this).
We also changed the fuel filter – sooner than scheduled, but a good time to do so when doing other stuff and I don’t see how it can hurt to change sooner. I used the revised FleetGuard 3 micron filter and took advantage of the pricing anomaly at Geno’s.
How do you inspect the inside of the fuel filter housing – with a mirror and flashlight? I sure couldn’t
get my body positioned up over the top of it to see down.
Do you clean the inside of the filter housing? How? It would not be good to wipe out with a rag
would it? Do you leave the drain open and rinse with clean fuel?
I notice the cap on the fuel filter housing is plastic. Are there problems rounding off the corners of
the molded-in nut on the top? Should I order a spare for the “boony box”?
Also a good time to install the PML deep capacity transmission pan I had ordered. I don’t know that this was really needed after further reading of the TDR and this website. But, I figure the increase in fluid capacity (adds four quarts) and whatever cooling is offered by the finned aluminum pan cannot hurt. I replaced both filters while I was doing. Geno’s includes directions regarding the extra care that must be taken with the neck gasket on the sump filter as does the TDR article. I used the cooling line drain method as described in the TDR article to change as much transmission fluid as possible.
I don’t think the TDR article does a really good job of describing exactly how to determine whether
the transmission has been refilled properly. I did a web search and found a good article on the 68RFE
that describes really well here: http://www.atraonline.com/gears/2010/2010-05/2010_5_4.pdf.
Note especially Figure 2 that charts where on the dipstick the fluid should be as the fluid
Temperature varies.
Does anyone know how sensitive the transmission is to the proper fluid fill? I messed with this for a
long time and have checked a half dozen times since and It looks right, but I see no way to be precise.
If I understand it correctly then it looks to me like you don’t have to be perfect and there is kind of a
range. Is that correct?
Finally, I tightened everything as I worked. I am thinking that it would be worthwhile to invest in a good torque wrench. Does that make sense?
Thanks!