Bright Idea
Member
- Joined
- Jun 9, 2019
- Posts
- 47
- Reaction score
- 14
- Location
- Scappoos, OR
- First Name
- Mike
- Truck Year
- 1990
- Truck Model
- V 2500 Suburbans
- Engine Size
- 5.7
Just to share my TH 400 filter and fluid change experience. TH 400 , 90 Suburban right at 200,000.
Drug it out of a barnyard in early JAN. Have been going thru all the usual stuff and when I got to the transmission fluid /filter change I learned a few things. Bought a NAPA filter and gasket. Drained and cleaned the pan replaced the o ring on the pickup tube and installed the new filter with a washer on the backside between the spacer and the new filter. This stabilizes the filter a bit as without it really flops around. Most information I found indicated the flopping around is normal. Buttoned up the pan and refilled with fluid. Approximatelty 5 1/2 quarts will get it to normal level. Upon startup i hear what sounds like a pump running dry, this went away in about 30 second to a minute. During the day intermittently driving this noise did not exist. After sitting overnight it would make the pump noise. After researching I decided that possibly the o ring on the pickup tube wasnt seated or the tube into the grommet on the filter for some reason was not tight. I bought a new filter and gasket and went thru the process again this time taking what I thought was a bit more care. Cold startup exact same noise form the pump. I remembered that there was an retired GM Service Mechanic that I know casually so I decided to see if he had any suggestions. The first thing he asked was what I was using for a filter ? I told him the standard NAPA filter /gasket kit. He asked if I knew if it was a screen or fabric filter and I knew it was fabric. He asked if I had the first replacement and I did, so I took it to him. Instantly he said the pump cant pull thru that material fast enough on cold startup and the noise is exactly what I had thought. He said that I need to find a filter with either a brass or stainless screen rather than the fabric. No one locally, could come up with anything but fabric or paper filter medium. I found filters with brass screen on ebay. I installed the filter a couple of days ago and the pump noise is gone. He said that prolonged use of the paper/fabric filters will eventually ruin the pump. He said that despite the claims that filters meet OEM Specs that is not always the case anymore. He said that the claim that the filter medium exceeds OEM spec can be very misleading and reduces the volume that is able to flow thru a system that needs a specific volume. He went on to say that there is no proof but he believes that with the advent of the drive up oil change places that usually use a house brand filter that is produced offshore at a very significant cost savings and the Specs were given little or no consideration in all likely hood have been the cause of many lack of lubrication failures in engines and transmissions. Normally caused by using a filter that is too restrictive for the application. Another case of " more not necessarily being better" Just a bit of information that may keep someone else from changing the fluid and filter 3 times. I do have very new looking red fluid.
Drug it out of a barnyard in early JAN. Have been going thru all the usual stuff and when I got to the transmission fluid /filter change I learned a few things. Bought a NAPA filter and gasket. Drained and cleaned the pan replaced the o ring on the pickup tube and installed the new filter with a washer on the backside between the spacer and the new filter. This stabilizes the filter a bit as without it really flops around. Most information I found indicated the flopping around is normal. Buttoned up the pan and refilled with fluid. Approximatelty 5 1/2 quarts will get it to normal level. Upon startup i hear what sounds like a pump running dry, this went away in about 30 second to a minute. During the day intermittently driving this noise did not exist. After sitting overnight it would make the pump noise. After researching I decided that possibly the o ring on the pickup tube wasnt seated or the tube into the grommet on the filter for some reason was not tight. I bought a new filter and gasket and went thru the process again this time taking what I thought was a bit more care. Cold startup exact same noise form the pump. I remembered that there was an retired GM Service Mechanic that I know casually so I decided to see if he had any suggestions. The first thing he asked was what I was using for a filter ? I told him the standard NAPA filter /gasket kit. He asked if I knew if it was a screen or fabric filter and I knew it was fabric. He asked if I had the first replacement and I did, so I took it to him. Instantly he said the pump cant pull thru that material fast enough on cold startup and the noise is exactly what I had thought. He said that I need to find a filter with either a brass or stainless screen rather than the fabric. No one locally, could come up with anything but fabric or paper filter medium. I found filters with brass screen on ebay. I installed the filter a couple of days ago and the pump noise is gone. He said that prolonged use of the paper/fabric filters will eventually ruin the pump. He said that despite the claims that filters meet OEM Specs that is not always the case anymore. He said that the claim that the filter medium exceeds OEM spec can be very misleading and reduces the volume that is able to flow thru a system that needs a specific volume. He went on to say that there is no proof but he believes that with the advent of the drive up oil change places that usually use a house brand filter that is produced offshore at a very significant cost savings and the Specs were given little or no consideration in all likely hood have been the cause of many lack of lubrication failures in engines and transmissions. Normally caused by using a filter that is too restrictive for the application. Another case of " more not necessarily being better" Just a bit of information that may keep someone else from changing the fluid and filter 3 times. I do have very new looking red fluid.