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Ideally, one would want to get any particulate from the bottom of the pan if possible before filling with fresh fluids.
I prefer avoiding shocking the transmission by doing forced flushes which does a 100% fluid replacement. Just preference.If you do not replace all the fluid you can, you're wasting your money.
Think about it this way: if your transmission were a swimming pool, would you take a bucketful of water out of one end and replace it with a bucketful in the other end? That's what you're doing when you replace what's in the pan.
True, and this was what I am trying to better address. The current fill is factory filled. I am trying to gauge whether original owners with no history of transmission service, when they did their first fluid service have they seen any incorrect fluid volumes from the factory?When you replace what you took out, you're trusting that whoever did it last did it right.
Checking the level properly isn't difficult. Mostly you need the car to be level and a way to measure the trans oil temp.
Yup. Pan removal does seem optimal for particulate removal.Ideally, one would want to get any particulate from the bottom of the pan if possible before filling with fresh fluids.
I respect your credentials, but i dont prefer nor plan on doing a flush.What exactly is shocking a transmission? FWIW, my last automotive industry job was working for Dana Off-highway in the transmission and axle division. I've never heard the term before.
The method I use doesn't "force" any fluid any more than the pump already moves fluid through the system. I'd be very interested to know how this is detrimental to the transmission as a whole or any of its components.
Understood, and I'll keep that in mind when i decide to do an advisement thread in the future.That's fine, but you should allow others to know exactly why you advise doing or not doing something that may be in their interest.