
Originally Posted by
Trannyman95
This needs to be moved to the 4T65E section.
High transmission temps can stem to a lot of different things. For starters you have a pretty loose torque converter which is going to create more heat than a stock converter. BEFORE jumping to ANY conclusions....... Are you going off of an aftermarket trans temp gauge that is installed in the pressure port hold on top of the trans case? If so then those numbers are meaningless as the case heat soaks from the exhaust crossover pipe and these numbers are false. I see a lot of cars that read anywhere from 20 to 50 deg F too hot by installing the temp sender here. The best way to read the trans fluid is either with a scan tool OR by installing the sender for your gauge in the lower pan or in a cooler line. I dont know anything about the size and gvw rating on the Desert Fox coolers, are you using it alone or in conjunction with the engine radiator? Poor cooler flow will greatly effect the cooling efficiency of a transmission. This can either be from a valve body problem, partially restricted radiator or external cooler, and even sloppy bushings inside the transmission. What does it do going down the highway? It should run cooler on a long drive down the highway as lockup will be turned on and eliminates torque converter slippage which will lower the trans temp UNLESS the converter is slipping a lot and that will certainly create a lot of extra heat. Im pretty sure their converters use Kevlar lockup clutch material which is not designed to slip so the pcm must have the lockup min duty% table numbers increased to help out with this. Also if you are not using lockup in 3rd at all as the factory settings are set up you will be creating more heat as you have the extra slippage from the higher stall and no lockup as most in town driving will be with those conditions.