Vaughn MacKenzie
TDR MEMBER
My '98.5 auto sprung a big leak on one of its aluminum trans cooler lines due to rubbing and wearing by a retainer clip. It is a long one that starts at the round coolant/ATF cooler on the passenger side and snakes around the torque converter cover and to the radiator along the driver side. I'm going to wrap tape around the spots that come in contact with the retainers to keep it from happening again. This is the first leak on the original auto, 229,300 miles.
I swapped out the line with one I got from Rock Auto but the quick connect on the rubber hose would not click into the new tube for anything, it wouldn't slide in even though it looks identical to the original. Evidently it's ever so slightly larger. I buggered up the quick connect so now I am wondering should I cut the connector off the rubber line and try to slide it over the end of the new tube and use a hose clamp on it? I'd cut it off as close as possible so the rubber hose isn't too short, it'd be close, but at the moment I'm not sure the best way to solve this issue. It was pretty maddening laying under the truck getting drizzled with a tiny stream of ATF and have the bugger refuse to connect. I tried and tried but ended up messing it up.
Vaughn
I swapped out the line with one I got from Rock Auto but the quick connect on the rubber hose would not click into the new tube for anything, it wouldn't slide in even though it looks identical to the original. Evidently it's ever so slightly larger. I buggered up the quick connect so now I am wondering should I cut the connector off the rubber line and try to slide it over the end of the new tube and use a hose clamp on it? I'd cut it off as close as possible so the rubber hose isn't too short, it'd be close, but at the moment I'm not sure the best way to solve this issue. It was pretty maddening laying under the truck getting drizzled with a tiny stream of ATF and have the bugger refuse to connect. I tried and tried but ended up messing it up.
Vaughn