Re: Any magical automatic transmission fluid?
TilliamWe,
I don't want to "tell" you what to do, I only offer up to you to do some more reading on type F and see if its something that you may think will help your situation.
Dextron vs type F is like any other oil thread. It goes on forever with yeah's and nay's and you never really get the answer you want out of them.
1. It's almost impossible for a DIY'er to diagnose whats slipping inside an automatic transmission. Some trannys have external taps that you can put gauges on to measure pump psi, some do not.
2. It could be the TQ converter (pump), the clutch packs glazed/broken/weak springs. Sticking actuators, all of the above, etc.
Dextron uses a base stock 10 weight hydraulic oil. Plus it has friction modifiers to make the transmission shift softer/smoother. A smoother shift means your slipping the clutch plates purposely. Much like slipping the clutch with a manual trans, slipping means wear.
Type F uses a base stock 15 weight hydraulic oil. So its a bit heavier to start with. If the impellar vanes in the TQ converter have started to burn, using the heavier weight will help keep pump psi up. Type F does not use friction modifiers. Type F is not designed to let clutches slip. Just the opposite in fact, it's designed to engage clutch packs very firmly
I wouldn't worry about mixing the 2. Its like mixing 5w-30 with 10w-40, doesn't really hurt anything. Its much worse mixing 1/2 good trans fluid and 1/2 bad trans fluid, which is what your doing when you don't get it all out.
To get most of your old fluid out. Remove the pan and filter. Put a big catch pan under the car. Disable the ignition system and crank the engine over for 10 seconds. Break for a minute and do it again. Keep repeating until the TQ converter has pumped everything out. Then reinstall a new filter/gasket/pan. Dump in 3 qts. Start and run for 30 seconds. Dump in 2 or 3 more qts, repeat. Once you get 5 or 6 qts in, start it and at idle shift through all the gears 1 by 1, put it back into park and check the level with the engine running. Some trannys will take as much as 12 qts to fill the system. It may be best to get a GM service manual that gives the actual spec for quantity.
Either way your trying to save the transmission at this point. Do some reading and see if a type f flush is the way you want to go. If it feels worse (and it shouldn't, the tranny should shift like a mack truck with type F) You can always go back to dextron.
Hope that helps
