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- #321
weekly update
Finished up the rear lip for the weatherstripping that seals the tailgate. Paint took a little longer to dry in the cold wet air.
I just used some metal screws and put them in existing holes that were in the aluminum pieces.
I had to clean out the inside of the weatherstripping because the old lip left rust chunks in the track. With those clean I put the weatherstripping on the new lip. I'll still need to seal the edge between the lip and the body but I didn't have the right stuff. I have a gutter leak (I think) to fix so I'll just use the same stuff once I address that problem. It'll be nice not to have diesel fumes coming inside since I still need to finish routing my exhaust.
I put the tailgate back on so I could keep it locked.
I studied all last week out of my manual, searched for a fantastic write-up I came across a month ago on a documented rebuild that I couldn't find (nope, didn't save the links), and picked up a tranny kit from a local wherehouse. I did some prep work like getting a bigger table to spread parts on in the work area and cleaning things up. I then wheeled the tranny to my humble backyard mechanic's shop (a shed) and started tearing it down. I'm taking my time and seeing how things work but should have it finished by this coming weekend.
Here are most of the parts out of the case and the manual I'm using. The parts come out in sections and that's how I plan on rebuilding it, one section at a time. I'll disassemble that piece, inspect, clean, and replace what comes in the rebuild kit and then reassemble that section. Once all the sections are done I'll put them into the case.
Last chunk removed. The rear band (on the right) looks pretty good but one edge on the friction material looks kind of chewed so I'm thinking about replacing it.
Case is empty.
I then cleaned up the case with solvent (I bought 5 cans of brake cleaner and used 2 on the case itself)
All of the hard parts look pretty good. No big wear marks or gouges.
Here is the kit I got, it's a transtec kit and I think Ebay has them for a similar price that I got this one (bought at shop cost thanks to some friends).
The master kit includes all the seals, high energy friction plates, gaskets, filter, main support bolts, and the front and rear bushings. It did not come with steels so I bought the steels subset (top left).
Good find. Early 4L80s had a 16 element sprag, I found mine to have the later and better 34 element sprag.
I was getting into the friction disk areas so I started soaking them. They actually bubbled a little from the ATF settling into all the tiny voids (soaking for a 1/2 hr is recommended).
The springs on the right replace the springs on the left. These are from the manual control transgo kit I put in the valve body. These were internal mods that I didn't do at the time because I didn't go deep enough. Well I'm deep enough now so I'm putting them in. They go on the direct drum.
The direct drum in on top and when I pulled the friction plates out of that I found them to be toast. The material was coming off as I rubbed it between my fingers so this must have been what made my tranny fluid dirty in a short amount of time. All the other friction plates and bands looked decent but they will all get replaced. It's funny but I'm glad to find something noticeably wrong with my limited knowledge because that justifies the rebuild. That center piece inside the drum has lip seals on it and I found it difficult to put it back in without the specific tool so I'll be finding one this week and replacing the seal I buggered.
There are seals on this intermediate piece. I followed others' steps in puting those on (without the special tool) by heating up some water and dropping them in to warm up. The kit came with teflon and plastic seals and I choose the teflon because I found others (tranny rebuilders) had suggested it. Once warm I opened them up with my "resizing" tool and slipped them onto their spots. The resizing tool is nothing more than a used spray can lid that has been cut. They then need to be shrunk so I wrapped the seals the the resizing tool and tightened the hose clamp. I did this in steps, not all at once, and the seals resized to the grooves. There are 4 of those seals on that shaft.
I'm about halfway done with the tranny. I will be double checking my valve body job and might be getting a new separator plate because the check ball holes seem to be more worn than I realized the first time I was in it. This time I will be installing a drain in the pan and I also need to trim some more off of the tranny mounts I came up with for just a little more clearance. My experience inside the tranny so far has mostly been straight forward. I did pick up a dial indicator to check on some tolerances once I start putting the parts back inside the case and I'll need to get that lip seal tool. Besides that I think I can do the rest with the tools I already have.
Finished up the rear lip for the weatherstripping that seals the tailgate. Paint took a little longer to dry in the cold wet air.
I just used some metal screws and put them in existing holes that were in the aluminum pieces.
I had to clean out the inside of the weatherstripping because the old lip left rust chunks in the track. With those clean I put the weatherstripping on the new lip. I'll still need to seal the edge between the lip and the body but I didn't have the right stuff. I have a gutter leak (I think) to fix so I'll just use the same stuff once I address that problem. It'll be nice not to have diesel fumes coming inside since I still need to finish routing my exhaust.
I put the tailgate back on so I could keep it locked.
I studied all last week out of my manual, searched for a fantastic write-up I came across a month ago on a documented rebuild that I couldn't find (nope, didn't save the links), and picked up a tranny kit from a local wherehouse. I did some prep work like getting a bigger table to spread parts on in the work area and cleaning things up. I then wheeled the tranny to my humble backyard mechanic's shop (a shed) and started tearing it down. I'm taking my time and seeing how things work but should have it finished by this coming weekend.
Here are most of the parts out of the case and the manual I'm using. The parts come out in sections and that's how I plan on rebuilding it, one section at a time. I'll disassemble that piece, inspect, clean, and replace what comes in the rebuild kit and then reassemble that section. Once all the sections are done I'll put them into the case.
Last chunk removed. The rear band (on the right) looks pretty good but one edge on the friction material looks kind of chewed so I'm thinking about replacing it.
Case is empty.
I then cleaned up the case with solvent (I bought 5 cans of brake cleaner and used 2 on the case itself)
All of the hard parts look pretty good. No big wear marks or gouges.
Here is the kit I got, it's a transtec kit and I think Ebay has them for a similar price that I got this one (bought at shop cost thanks to some friends).
The master kit includes all the seals, high energy friction plates, gaskets, filter, main support bolts, and the front and rear bushings. It did not come with steels so I bought the steels subset (top left).
Good find. Early 4L80s had a 16 element sprag, I found mine to have the later and better 34 element sprag.
I was getting into the friction disk areas so I started soaking them. They actually bubbled a little from the ATF settling into all the tiny voids (soaking for a 1/2 hr is recommended).
The springs on the right replace the springs on the left. These are from the manual control transgo kit I put in the valve body. These were internal mods that I didn't do at the time because I didn't go deep enough. Well I'm deep enough now so I'm putting them in. They go on the direct drum.
The direct drum in on top and when I pulled the friction plates out of that I found them to be toast. The material was coming off as I rubbed it between my fingers so this must have been what made my tranny fluid dirty in a short amount of time. All the other friction plates and bands looked decent but they will all get replaced. It's funny but I'm glad to find something noticeably wrong with my limited knowledge because that justifies the rebuild. That center piece inside the drum has lip seals on it and I found it difficult to put it back in without the specific tool so I'll be finding one this week and replacing the seal I buggered.
There are seals on this intermediate piece. I followed others' steps in puting those on (without the special tool) by heating up some water and dropping them in to warm up. The kit came with teflon and plastic seals and I choose the teflon because I found others (tranny rebuilders) had suggested it. Once warm I opened them up with my "resizing" tool and slipped them onto their spots. The resizing tool is nothing more than a used spray can lid that has been cut. They then need to be shrunk so I wrapped the seals the the resizing tool and tightened the hose clamp. I did this in steps, not all at once, and the seals resized to the grooves. There are 4 of those seals on that shaft.
I'm about halfway done with the tranny. I will be double checking my valve body job and might be getting a new separator plate because the check ball holes seem to be more worn than I realized the first time I was in it. This time I will be installing a drain in the pan and I also need to trim some more off of the tranny mounts I came up with for just a little more clearance. My experience inside the tranny so far has mostly been straight forward. I did pick up a dial indicator to check on some tolerances once I start putting the parts back inside the case and I'll need to get that lip seal tool. Besides that I think I can do the rest with the tools I already have.
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