why not Mobile 1 ATF in the AW4

BrettM

NAXJA Forum User
Location
michifornia
a couple posts down several people mentioned that it is a bad idea to put Mobile 1 ATF in the AW4.

i just swapped in an AW4 (replacing Peugoet) and put about 6 quarts of the stuff in, i thought it was the good stuff? :huh:

so why not? how urgent is it that i change the fluid to something else?
 
I lost 3 mpg when I put Mobil 1 ATF in my AW4 transmission of my 88 XJ. After changing lots of sensors I realized I lost my MPG after the Mobil 1 atf.

I took my XJ to the dealer and had the transfusion done on the transmission.

There is a TSB from the late 80s or early 90s which said to only use Dextron which has the certification number on the bottle. The Mobil 1 ATF says it is Dextron III but no cert number on the bottle, also no cert number on the material data sheet on their web site.

It up to you what you want to do but I hightly recommend you get the Mobil 1 out of the transmission.

I will say I have had no problems with Mobil 1 ATF in my NP 231 transfercase, only problems in my AW4.
 
3mpg would definitely be worth getting it out, especially since i'm going to drive it from Michigan to Cali (2200 miles) in 3 weeks. would it need to be flushed or just drain the pan and fill with regular. i only put 6 in, and if the tranny is totally dry, i think it's supposed to take 16, so i'm guessing there's 10 quarts of the right stuff in there.

has anyone else experienced a gas mileage difference? what could cause that? i haven't noticed much, but i did change from a 5 speed, and swapped the 4.10s for 4.88s pretty soon afterwards too.
 
Not to scare you but people have had varying results with synthetic in the auto trannies, they have run the whole gamut from 'wonderful' to 'burned up my tranny in less than 500 miles' and everything in between. I would recommend that if you think you are having ANY tranny problems, stop, drain the Mobil-1 out and put in the recommended fluid. You will have to do this several times, drain and refil, drain and refil to get most of it out. A lot of it stays in the tranny when you drain the pan so the only way to get it all out at once is to have the flush done. I think alot has to do with the condtion of the tranny when it was added, you might get lucky but keep an eye on it and watch the fluid level. It tends to find any bad seals no matter where it is, engine, TC or diffs and work it's way out. No matter what the jury is still out on whether it is good stuff or not for AT's....
 
I'd have to agree on using standard Dexron fluid. Synthetic is just too darn slick and it can get past the clutch and piston seals and cause problems internally. Not to mention leak past all the outer seals too. Chrysler themselves are very picky about what fluid to use in the AW4. The ATF+4 is 75% synthetic and they expressly state not to use it in AW4 transmissions. The fluid capacity specs I just found said 8.45 quarts total. Just draining and refilling the pan account for only about 3-4 quarts, the rest is in the torque converter. If it was my Jeep, I would go out and buy a case of Dexron fluid. Drain and refill the pan, then take loose the trans cooler pressure line and run the engine while pouring fluid into it. Just be careful not to run it dry, you can shut off the engine if you can't get the fluid in as fast as it is coming out. This is basically what the transmission fluid transfusion machine does, just without the mess. Run the whole case of fluid through and all the Mobil 1 should be gone. The pump will flow a minimum of 1 quart every 20 seconds, mine flow checked at a rate of about 1 quart ever 15 seconds. Having a buddy with a watch and to turn off the engine will help out. Or you can just take it somewhere and have it done for you. Either way, it should be done.

Bryan
 
Here is an other thought, have you ever herd of, or tryed to run amsoil in your trans? I'm running it in a 91 ford 460 with a E40D thats a rebulit trans, I also have a 2000 power stroke that when I bought it the trip computer read 12.3 avg/mpg now i do not know how true it is but I switch the motor trans and the tcase over to amsoil and now it read 16.1 avg/mpg. I mave not noticed any problems with the trans, and there is not going to be any. Plus amsoil has ATF that meet the specs on an Alsion trans, behind the durmax. Plus a power shift ATF used in monster trucks and RVs, I have hurd that Mobile 1 is poor oil, I also have some info on test that have been done on Mobile 1 and Amsoil. Plus Amsoil stands behind what they say and test. Ask mobile 1 how they stack up next to Amsoil. Let me know if you what the Info. Triple 4
 
triple 4 said:
Here is an other thought, have you ever herd of, or tryed to run amsoil in your trans? I'm running it in a 91 ford 460 with a E40D thats a rebulit trans, I also have a 2000 power stroke that when I bought it the trip computer read 12.3 avg/mpg now i do not know how true it is but I switch the motor trans and the tcase over to amsoil and now it read 16.1 avg/mpg. I mave not noticed any problems with the trans, and there is not going to be any. Plus amsoil has ATF that meet the specs on an Alsion trans, behind the durmax. Plus a power shift ATF used in monster trucks and RVs, I have hurd that Mobile 1 is poor oil, I also have some info on test that have been done on Mobile 1 and Amsoil. Plus Amsoil stands behind what they say and test. Ask mobile 1 how they stack up next to Amsoil. Let me know if you what the Info. Triple 4

Hmmm, so do you run amsoil tranny fluid in your auto tranny XJ ???
 
If you pull the drain plug you will get 3 quarts out of the transmissoin. You can do this several times. My AW4 manaual says the capacity from "dry" is 13 quarts. My guess is the volume of the lines and trans cooler is not included in that number. When I changed my transmission filter I put in 4 quarts of Mobil 1 ATF then a few days later I put in 3 more quarts of ATF. I pulled the oil pan drain. I was not going to pull the pan again to get an additional quart.

I went with the flush because the "blended" ATF would be pumped out and only nomral Dextron would be dumped back in. I think they change 12 quarts in a flush, so 12 quarts of blend out, 12 quarts of normal back in. I could figure out what it would take to change it out but it more complicate that you would think. When I was in college we'd have the tank full of sea water and a fresh water hose dumps water in and there is a hose out taking the blend. We had to figure out how long before fresh water was coming out of the tap.

The pulling the drain and filling with 3 quarts is similar to the problem. I think as a general rule it will take 300% of the volume to get it "flushed" that way.

I had mine done at the dealer, it only took the one flush to solve the problem. I told the mechanic what I had done so he would know it was not "routine maintenance" but a flush to get out "suspect" fluid.
 
I did the tranfusion to AMSOIL ATF on my 92 which had 170K miles on it at the time. That was about 9 months and 5k miles ago ( now at 175K). Didn't notice any changes at all in performance (shifting or gas mileage) and also don't have any leaks.
 
mad maXJ said:
what's a typical cost to get it done?


We used to do the fluid exchange service at the dealer I work at. It used to run somewhere close to $200+ dollars. It works good. What I described above with allowing the trans to pump out the old fluid into a drain via the disconnected cooler line is pretty much how the flusher worked. We just connected the machine in series with the cooler circuit and pumped the clean fluid back into the trans by the cooler return line while the trans pumped the old fluid out. The only problem I had with it was the machine was supplied to us by a chemical sales company that wanted us to use their $50 flush and conditioner fluid additive kit. We were having problems with techs not being able to flush all of the "flush additive" from the system and it was causing torque converter problems. Mostly a bad shudder when it engaged and disengaged. We started just running it with straight fluid, but the chemical company pulled the machine out due to lagging sales of its trans service chemical kit. It really works well, but is quite expensive.

Bryan
 
I also run Amsoil ATF in my AW4 and have had no issues, nor loss of fuel mileage. I started off swithing to M1 ATF but found the Amsoil to be cheaper. Synthetic ATF in my AW4 for 50k miles, no issues here. I'm at 110k now.

--Matt
 
The consensus is that the synthetic oils are actually too good for the clutches, and they don't "stick" like they're supposed to. If you've never taken an auto apart, it's FULL of clutches and gears - the AW4 has something like 24 frictions discs, IIRC. Since they are actually bronze, there is a threshhold value for friction reduction before you lose power/efficiency (BTW - it is the slipping of the clutches that causes the loss of mileage, and the transmission operating temperature will rise as a result. If you don't have a divorced cooler setup, this will manifest as increased engine temperature as wll - but only slightly.)

Also, as I recall from the AW4 service manual, the "service fill" (pan only) is four quarts, and the "overhaul fill" (entire box including TC) is eight quarts of fluid. If you just pull the plug and refill, you will drain out slightly less than four quarts of fluid, and the small extra amount leftover when you refill won't hurt anything.

From what I've been hearing about the "transfusion machine" service, I may build one for myself once I bother to figure out how (I just haven't been arsed to yet...) It would be nice to change ALL the fluid once in a while...

5-90

Oh - and I'd get rid of the synthetic stuff. I've done more auto transmission work than I care to admit to, and they really are picky devices...

5-90
 
i'm pretty much broke, but certainly fluid is cheaper than a new tranny. I figure it already has 25% or more of non-synthetic. How many quarts should I buy to run through it?

8 quarts -37.5% synthetic
16 quarts -18.75% synthetic
24 quarts -9.375% synthetic
etc.

how far should I go? cost is important. Also, what fluid? any fluid that is Dsxron III? looks like NAPA has that for $1.39 per quart, not bad.
 
mad maXJ said:
i'm pretty much broke, but certainly fluid is cheaper than a new tranny. I figure it already has 25% or more of non-synthetic. How many quarts should I buy to run through it?

8 quarts -37.5% synthetic
16 quarts -18.75% synthetic
24 quarts -9.375% synthetic
etc.

how far should I go? cost is important. Also, what fluid? any fluid that is Dsxron III? looks like NAPA has that for $1.39 per quart, not bad.


anyone?
 
Pretty much all I use is Valvoline (should be pretty close to $1.50 per.) How much? I don't know what your current means are, but there will be a point of diminishing returns if you keep doing partial changes - and flushing out the torque converter (which is FULL of fluid!) is only doable under pressure and operation (think: transfusion machine.)

Figure your percentages are a bit low for flushing out - add an "error factor" of 10% of the result or thereabouts. Probably two to three service changes will get you down to where you won't hove too much trouble, but I won't swear to it.

As far as what fluid to use, pretty much any name brand (except Pennzoil or Quaker State!) that carries DexronII or DexronIII specification will serve well.

5-90
 
When buying Dextron III ATF make sure the Certifiation number is on the back. It should be something like D-3XXX. Look at all the bottles of AFT at teh store and go with only the brands that have the certification number on the bottle.

For discussion sake lets say your AW-4 have a volume of 13 quarts. I got this number form the AMC/Jeep AW-4 overhaul manaul I purchased for my 88 XJ. Also lets say you have all 13 quarts Mobil 1 ATF. I also take it you will only be draining out of the pan pain hole not pulling the pan. I get 3 quarts when using the drain, 4 quarts when I pull the pan. Also run the engine for 5-10 minutes between fillings to get a good mixing fo the fluid. You may want to set the parking prake and let it idle in neutral instead of park. You get full pump pressure in neutral, paritial pump pressure in park.

Start
13 qts Mobil 1,

Change 1
remove 3 quarts, add 3 qts - 77% Synthetic

Change 2
remove 3 quarts, add 3 qts - 59% Synthetic

Change 3
remove 3 quarts, add 3 qts - 45% Synthetic

Change 4
remove 3 quarts, add 3 qts - 35% Synthetic

Change 5
remove 3 quarts, add 3 qts - 27% Synthetic

Change 6
remove 3 quarts, add 3 qts - 21% Synthetic

Change 7
remove 3 quarts, add 3 qts - 16% Synthetic

Change 8
remove 3 quarts, add 3 qts - 12.3% Synthetic

Change 9
remove 3 quarts, add 3 qts - 9.43% Synthetic

Change 10
remove 3 quarts, add 3 qts - 7.25% Synthetic

Change 11
remove 3 quarts, add 3 qts - 5.6% Synthetic

Change 12
remove 3 quarts, add 3 qts - 4.3% Synthetic

Change 13
remove 3 quarts, add 3 qts - 3.3% Synthetic

I ran the numbers using Excell. If you had ONLY 6 quarts of mobil 1 AFT in the 13 quart trans it would be more like this:

Change 1 - 35% Synthetic
Change 2 - 27% Synthetic
Change 3 - 21% Synthetic
Change 4 - 16% Synthetic
Change 5 - 12% Synthetic
Change 6 - 9.6% Synthetic
Change 7 - 7.36% Synthetic
Change 8 - 5.66% Synthetic
Change 9 - 4.35% Synthetic
Change 10 - 3.35% Synthetic
Change 11 - 2.58% Synthetic
Change 12 - 1.98% Synthetic
Change 13 - 1.52% Synthetic

With either situaion - 13 or 6 qts of Mobil 1 it will take 9 or 6 changes of fluid to get below 10% synthetic. You will need 18-24 quarts to get 90 percent of the Synthetic out of the transmission.

I do know one 12 quart flush as the dealer did solve my MPG problem. This may save you time and the burden of disposing of 6 gallons of ATF. I like the idea of the transfusion, all that "blend" is pumped out and only non-blend is returned. You will have the torque converter flushed when you are done!
 
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