KaiserM109
New member
- 1,108
- 4
- 0
- Location
- SE Aurora, CO
I just finished (almost) driving the M923A1 823 miles from Dublin, to Denver, CO. For the last two days it showed symptoms of trouble in low gear. It would buck and jump until it got into second. Because of logistic issues, we left it 16 mi. from the storage yard and came back 2 days later, yesterday, to finish the trip.
This time it wouldn’t start moving until the RPMs hit 2200 and it only started forward slowly. I pulled over and checked the transmission fluid again, but, as it was at the start of the trip, it was at the top mark. It started working a little better, so I pulled out onto the street and got into the turn lane. When the light changed, it wouldn’t go forward at all, only reverse. It was like it was in neutral. Just to try anything, I tried shifting the transfer into low range and now I seem to have that in neutral for real; no forward, no reverse. I had it hauled to the storage yard.
The last part of the trip has been cold and the truck spent the last two days before the failure parked at below-zero temperatures. There were no bad noised, no leaks or any other indications of trouble. The transmission temperature has stayed in the nominal range all the way.
Anybody have suggestions? I am going to wait for warmer weather to mess with it. I am hoping against hope that it is temperature related, but even if it starts working, I doubt that I will be willing to trust it off-road.
Questions:
This time it wouldn’t start moving until the RPMs hit 2200 and it only started forward slowly. I pulled over and checked the transmission fluid again, but, as it was at the start of the trip, it was at the top mark. It started working a little better, so I pulled out onto the street and got into the turn lane. When the light changed, it wouldn’t go forward at all, only reverse. It was like it was in neutral. Just to try anything, I tried shifting the transfer into low range and now I seem to have that in neutral for real; no forward, no reverse. I had it hauled to the storage yard.
The last part of the trip has been cold and the truck spent the last two days before the failure parked at below-zero temperatures. There were no bad noised, no leaks or any other indications of trouble. The transmission temperature has stayed in the nominal range all the way.
Anybody have suggestions? I am going to wait for warmer weather to mess with it. I am hoping against hope that it is temperature related, but even if it starts working, I doubt that I will be willing to trust it off-road.
Questions:
- What kind of fluid should I put in it and how much does it take?
- What is the civilian equivelent filter for the transmission?
- Where do you get a transmission like this rebuilt and what is its civilian model number?