BradL84D30M1008
Member
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- Location
- Houston/TX
So two months ago I was under my '84 M1028 to remove my starter and have it rebuilt......underside of transmission pan, transfer case, and adapter were all dry, had probably put ~1000 miles on the truck through last deer season with no leaks of transmission fluid whatsoever from anywhere.
This past weekend I'm back under the truck to re-install my rebuilt starter, and I notice four or five drops of transmission fluid have accumulated on the underside of the transmission pan. The truck had been sitting stationary for 2 months in one place. I could not see if any transmission fluid had actually dropped to the ground under the truck,just looked like 4 or 5 drops had "condensed" on the underside of the transmission pan.
I'm guessing that the origination of the transmission fluid could perhaps be where the fill tube drops in from above - maybe an o-ring for the fill tube finally dried out after 34+ years and sitting idle for 2 months?
Funny thing is, I dried off the bottom of the pan, and then drove the truck for ~100 miles around the deer lease this weekend, and had no further drips off the transmission pan at all....can't tell that I've lost any transmission fluid from the transmission.
Any ideas what could cause such a phenomenon?
On a positive note, rebuild of the starter and re-connection/cleaning of both electrical connects seemed to have cured my issue of intermittent clicks/non-starts......truck now starts instantly with no issues.
This past weekend I'm back under the truck to re-install my rebuilt starter, and I notice four or five drops of transmission fluid have accumulated on the underside of the transmission pan. The truck had been sitting stationary for 2 months in one place. I could not see if any transmission fluid had actually dropped to the ground under the truck,just looked like 4 or 5 drops had "condensed" on the underside of the transmission pan.
I'm guessing that the origination of the transmission fluid could perhaps be where the fill tube drops in from above - maybe an o-ring for the fill tube finally dried out after 34+ years and sitting idle for 2 months?
Funny thing is, I dried off the bottom of the pan, and then drove the truck for ~100 miles around the deer lease this weekend, and had no further drips off the transmission pan at all....can't tell that I've lost any transmission fluid from the transmission.
Any ideas what could cause such a phenomenon?
On a positive note, rebuild of the starter and re-connection/cleaning of both electrical connects seemed to have cured my issue of intermittent clicks/non-starts......truck now starts instantly with no issues.