tranny fluid leak

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IT-Purrrs

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I was underneath the car today just checking things out after noticing on the driveway some oil and possibly tranny fluid. I know about the oil problem i need valve cover gaskets which should be coming in soon. When i went underneath the car i noticed the tranny fluid dripping a little bit where the axle enters the transmission. Do i have a bad seal in there and do i need to pull the transmission and axle do fix that?
 

projectSHO89

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Yeah, that's what needs to be done to fix it.

A whole lot of work to replace a seal. I would only address it if the cost of the leaking fluid got too great.

Steve
 

sdpatt

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Yuo may want to try a bottle of ATF Stop Leak. I had it help me until my clutch job and it almost stopped the seal leaks that had developed over 269,000 miles.
 

ATXSHO

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No No No, EASY fix. Which side is it? They're both pretty much easy to fix. There's totally NO reason to drop the tranny. There's only 3 bolt/nuts to undo and slide out the axle on the driver side and 5 on the passenger side for the support bracket in the middle. Nothing else is needed to unbolt, unless your above average size and the one on the passenger side needs fixing. There's tight fit getting the 2 10mm bolts off the support bracket, other than that it's an easy job. Go by your output shaft seal(s) and replace it yourself easily for under $10-15 and no more than 3 hours of slow working. The only part that took me longer was getting the metal seal part off and installing the other one, other then that the rest only took half an hour to an hour. Good Luck.

Edit: That was on a Gen I like yours, 5-speed. Oh and about your sig, you might wanna change that if your referring to the SHO spoiler as a SC spoiler. It came on most of the plus models. wink

Bolts/nuts that need to be removed when doing this are the lower arm to steering knuckle pinch bolt and nut, tie rod end slotted nut & cotter pin, and sway bar end link to strut brace nut. For the passenger side, you'll need to remove the 2 10mm bolts on the center bracket behind the oil pan. The passenger side axle should/will slide out and the driver side will need some extra force and maybe a little pry action. If you do the passenger side, you'll need another person or use your foot to push the assembly of where the rotor is so you can have your hands on the axle coming out and place it in a safe position as it will go back in the direction of the tranny. I used my foot to push. :D Be sure to have like something to hold up the axle to not put strain on the CV joints, I used an exta set of jack stands.

<small>[ June 12, 2003, 07:09 PM: Message edited by: ATXSHO ]</small>
 

IT-Purrrs

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Thanks alot that sounds liek a much better idea then dropping the tranny, and about my signiture when i bought the car someone put a thunderbird SC spoiler on it i just forgot to mention the thunderbird part. thanks again.
 

COliveira95

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ATXSHO is correct. I just did this on my 95 MTX AFTER putting the tranny back up during clutch job. I finished the clutch job and didn't replace the axle seals (stupid me) and I noticed the leak after driving the next day. ATXSHO did a very good job at outlining the procedure. Oh and a small hammer works great for tapping in the driver's side axle seal. Tight area but it's doable.
 

ATXSHO

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COliveira95, that sounds familuar. :D I noticed mine the next day in the morning too when it was infront of my front bumper. jpshakeh

IT-Purrrs, forgot to mention that you'll need a decent sized bar to pry out the lower arm to steering knuckle assembly with help of the subframe and pushing down on your part. Good Luck. wink

<small>[ June 13, 2003, 12:08 AM: Message edited by: ATXSHO ]</small>
 

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