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#1
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Just bought a '90 240 w/ 90,000 miles. Last 1,000 miles, the tranny was leaking and it looks like there was practically no oil in it. When driven, sometimes gears slide. Got better after I added a bit of oil. Will take to garage tomorrow to check for leaks and add oil. What I would like to know is: should I expect short/long term damage? After oil has been propely added, will the tranny stay the same or get worse? What's the most likely scenario. Thanks. |
#2
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On Tue, 03 Mar 2009 19:48:20 -0800, James Sweet jamessweet1 (AT) trashmail (DOT) net> wrote: Someone wrote: Just bought a '90 240 w/ 90,000 miles. Last 1,000 miles, the tranny was leaking and it looks like there was practically no oil in it. When driven, sometimes gears slide. Got better after I added a bit of oil. Will take to garage tomorrow to check for leaks and add oil. What I would like to know is: should I expect short/long term damage? After oil has been propely added, will the tranny stay the same or get worse? What's the most likely scenario. Thanks. Is this auto or manual? Usually the torque converter will start slipping badly before an auto is too far out of fluid. With a manual, once they have been damaged, they usually deteriorate pretty quickly. Wouldn't hurt to fill it up with the proper amount of fluid and try driving it, but there's a good chance you'll be looking for a replacement transmission or rebuild. auto It did slip, but nothing too dramatic. So I might be "ok"...? Should it remain the way it will be after all the oil is added? Or should I expect deterioration from that point on? |
#3
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Someone wrote: On Tue, 03 Mar 2009 19:48:20 -0800, James Sweet jamessweet1 (AT) trashmail (DOT) net> wrote: Someone wrote: Just bought a '90 240 w/ 90,000 miles. Last 1,000 miles, the tranny was leaking and it looks like there was practically no oil in it. When driven, sometimes gears slide. Got better after I added a bit of oil. Will take to garage tomorrow to check for leaks and add oil. What I would like to know is: should I expect short/long term damage? After oil has been propely added, will the tranny stay the same or get worse? What's the most likely scenario. Thanks. Is this auto or manual? Usually the torque converter will start slipping badly before an auto is too far out of fluid. With a manual, once they have been damaged, they usually deteriorate pretty quickly. Wouldn't hurt to fill it up with the proper amount of fluid and try driving it, but there's a good chance you'll be looking for a replacement transmission or rebuild. auto It did slip, but nothing too dramatic. So I might be "ok"...? Should it remain the way it will be after all the oil is added? Or should I expect deterioration from that point on? How low was it? It holds something like 11 quarts of fluid. There's no way to tell really, but when my mom's 240 was auto, a cracked cooling line drained enough fluid that it started acting up and it went another 100K once I fixed that so you might come out fine. |
#4
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Just bought a '90 240 w/ 90,000 miles. *Last 1,000 miles, the tranny was leaking and it looks like there was practically no oil in it. When driven, sometimes gears slide. *Got better after I added a bit of oil. *Will take to garage tomorrow to check for leaks and add oil. What I would like to know is: should I expect short/long term damage? After oil has been propely added, will the tranny stay the same or get worse? *What's the most likely scenario. Thanks. |
#5
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On Wed, 04 Mar 2009 03:05:13 GMT, Someone <someone (AT) somewhere (DOT) com wrote: Just bought a '90 240 w/ 90,000 miles. Last 1,000 miles, the tranny was leaking and it looks like there was practically no oil in it. When driven, sometimes gears slide. Got better after I added a bit of oil. Will take to garage tomorrow to check for leaks and add oil. What I would like to know is: should I expect short/long term damage? After oil has been propely added, will the tranny stay the same or get worse? What's the most likely scenario. Thanks. Thanks for all your replies, the car spent more than a day in an independent garage (cheap...). Few things to do... For now, it looks like everything is fine. Apparently there was about 4-6 quarts left. I test drove the car on highway (no police...) up to 90 mph and it runs perfect (for now anyway). No slipping at any speed or under any type of acceleration. The original owner did his engine oil change at Costco. And last September, the guy at Costco wrote a note on the invoice that "Trans is leaking have it checked". Unfortunately, original owner did not read invoice. Also, two months later, he went to a Volvo dealer, but the dealer didn't say anything about it... And one more, a month ago he went to an "Oil Changer" outfit and asked if tranny oil was low. The woman pulls the stick, have a look at it and says everything is fine... The car drives like a bomb. I use complete treatment fuel system to remove some junk in the engine. The car was switched to synthetic at 70,000 miles in 1999 (10 yr old). Minor leak in upper engine seal. On a fun note, during the 20 years of ownership, he NEVER changed the power steering fluid. I asked to have it changed and it came out black. |
#6
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On Thu, 05 Mar 2009 17:25:05 -0800, James Sweet jamessweet1 (AT) trashmail (DOT) net> wrote: Someone wrote: On Wed, 04 Mar 2009 03:05:13 GMT, Someone <someone (AT) somewhere (DOT) com wrote: Just bought a '90 240 w/ 90,000 miles. Last 1,000 miles, the tranny was leaking and it looks like there was practically no oil in it. When driven, sometimes gears slide. Got better after I added a bit of oil. Will take to garage tomorrow to check for leaks and add oil. What I would like to know is: should I expect short/long term damage? After oil has been propely added, will the tranny stay the same or get worse? What's the most likely scenario. Thanks. Thanks for all your replies, the car spent more than a day in an independent garage (cheap...). Few things to do... For now, it looks like everything is fine. Apparently there was about 4-6 quarts left. I test drove the car on highway (no police...) up to 90 mph and it runs perfect (for now anyway). No slipping at any speed or under any type of acceleration. The original owner did his engine oil change at Costco. And last September, the guy at Costco wrote a note on the invoice that "Trans is leaking have it checked". Unfortunately, original owner did not read invoice. Also, two months later, he went to a Volvo dealer, but the dealer didn't say anything about it... And one more, a month ago he went to an "Oil Changer" outfit and asked if tranny oil was low. The woman pulls the stick, have a look at it and says everything is fine... The car drives like a bomb. I use complete treatment fuel system to remove some junk in the engine. The car was switched to synthetic at 70,000 miles in 1999 (10 yr old). Minor leak in upper engine seal. On a fun note, during the 20 years of ownership, he NEVER changed the power steering fluid. I asked to have it changed and it came out black. Auto transmission leaks are fairly common on those, the cooling lines crack where they bolt to the frame under the car. I think most people never change their power steering fluid. I've changed mine once, but it isn't something that tends to get done in the life of a car. I'm not too "mechanical" myself, but the mechanic wrote: "replaced rear transmission sleeve and seal" Hope it helps. |
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