In my 08, I had the transmission temp peg my 285* gauge with no ill affects.
Thanks for the info. I was reading the temps off of oem gauge in dash. Where the the sensor is l do not know.
Only have 2500 miles on truck. transmission usually in 170-180 range empty. I was hauling a 13000 lbs 5 th wheel up 7% 3 mile grade. No warnings came on.
OEM trans temp is read from a thermistor inside the solenoid module, so that is sump temp.
What were you doing, to get it up to that kind of sump temp? Some advice: (1) Don't do that again! (2) I'd suggest that you change your trans fluid.
Not hijack this thread too much.......Question for Transengineer? Is there anything to be gained from shifting these new auto trans into neutral when sitting at an extended stop light,versus sitting there in drive as far as keeping the trans a little cooler? I haven't owned an auto in years, an old habit I have from the old days......
Sam
Sam,
Yes, indeed. Shifting the trans to Neutral when stopped at a light will definitely help to keep the trans cool. In Drive (at a stop) you are generating heat in the converter, due to the speed difference between the engine (idle speed) and trans input (zero speed). If you shift to Neutral, the trans input spins up to almost match the engine RPM, so you have almost no heat generated.
OUCH! Are you talking trans sump temp (not "to cooler" temp)? That is WAY too hot, and consider yourself fortunate if you haven't seen any issues from it. I presume your "Trans Temp" light came on?
I would advise keeping your sump temp at 230°F or below. The cooler, the better. Once it goes over 230°F, start looking for a place to stop and cool down. Brief spikes over this are not a problem (you can indeed hit 240, 250, 260, even 270° for brief periods, without instantly killing your trans), but you don't want to run for extended periods at these levels.
To the cooler temp, trans light was on. Took it to the dealer afterwards, they checked it, DID NOT change the fluid, it was not discolored or smelled any different from new fluid. Drove it another 40,000 miles with out issue.
In my 08, I had the transmission temp peg my 285* gauge with no ill affects.
Sam,
Yes, indeed. Shifting the trans to Neutral when stopped at a light will definitely help to keep the trans cool. In Drive (at a stop) you are generating heat in the converter, due to the speed difference between the engine (idle speed) and trans input (zero speed). If you shift to Neutral, the trans input spins up to almost match the engine RPM, so you have almost no heat generated.
Nice to have an expert on this forum. Can you tell me why the temperature rise so dramatically when towing up a mountain? With the torque converter locked up it would think the temp would stay lower. Is the heat generated from gears being loaded more than usual?
I presume you're talking about towing at highway speeds, where the Torque Converter Clutch is locked (so you're not generating heat within the converter). Basically, any inefficiency in the transmission gets converted into heat. Let's suppose your trans is 96% efficient under these conditions. In 5th gear, the 68RFE is using two of the planetary gearsets to transmit torque, and you generally loose about 1% per gearset. And let's suppose your pumping losses (to maintain line pressure and cooler flow) are 2%. That's in the right ballpark. So then, 4% of the total power coming from the engine is getting converted into heat inside your transmission. So that is the source of your heat (even if the TCC is locked).
Now when climbing a grade, the power requirements go up significantly. For example, I just looked at a simulation I run for a 2500 truck with trailer. Now the exact figures will vary depending on weight, tire size, axle ratio, frontal area, etc. But (for the particular configuration I was running) I found the propshaft torque required on level ground, at 50 mph, was 211.7 ft-lbs. On a 7% grade (again at 50 mph), the prop torque required was 890.5 ft-lbs. So it takes over 4 times as much power to climb the grade as on level ground. Therefore, you are putting over 4 times the amount of heat into your trans (when climbing a 7% grade) as you would be on level ground. And that is why your sump temp increases.