Let me preface this by saying that I'm cursed where overdrive automatic trannys are concerned. Always have been. Non O/D's are no problem with me, but I have had to fix (mild fixes to full rebuilds) every O/D tranny I've ever owned. (groan)
A few weeks ago I noticed that periodically the tranny in the Town Car was shifting kinda mushy, and the torque converter was having difficulty locking up...then after a while, the O/D light would flash. If I stopped & shut the engine off for a minute, everything was fine upon restart, the tranny would shift normally.
After a while, restarting the engine wasn't fixing it, so I stopped driving it. I wasn't getting any codes to give me a hint, but experience from another tranny issue on an Expedition led me to assume the TCC solenoid was kaput.
So today, I finally had the spare time to do the deed...jack it up & drop the pan.
For a quick recap on my car, I bought it used last January. The car had 194K on the clock, but the price was excellent. The car performed perfectly on my hour long test drive, and I gave it a pretty decent look-over. The tranny fluid was old, but didn't smell burnt, so I planned on changing it when the weather warmed up a bit (I hate working on cars when it's freezing).
Once I dropped the pan, and saw the original yellow factory plug sitting there, I knew the pan had never been off before.
Because the fluid didn't smell super nasty, I can only assume that it was flushed at some point, without replacing the filter.
And naturally, the magnet in the corner was completely caked with metal filings. There were even some large slivers stuck to it!
So at this point, past experience says that any idea of a complete system flush was out the window, because doing that will only speed up the demise of this tranny.
So I replaced the TCC (Torque Converter Control) solenoid, slapped a new filter in it, cleaned up the pan, magnet, wiped off the bottom of the valve body & slapped it back together.
I took it for a test spin for a few miles, and the tranny is shifting normally again. Sweet!
I fully expect to be rebuilding this tranny at some point in the near future. But that's okay, I really like the car & love driving it!
Next fix...rear air springs! (soon)
A few weeks ago I noticed that periodically the tranny in the Town Car was shifting kinda mushy, and the torque converter was having difficulty locking up...then after a while, the O/D light would flash. If I stopped & shut the engine off for a minute, everything was fine upon restart, the tranny would shift normally.
After a while, restarting the engine wasn't fixing it, so I stopped driving it. I wasn't getting any codes to give me a hint, but experience from another tranny issue on an Expedition led me to assume the TCC solenoid was kaput.
So today, I finally had the spare time to do the deed...jack it up & drop the pan.
For a quick recap on my car, I bought it used last January. The car had 194K on the clock, but the price was excellent. The car performed perfectly on my hour long test drive, and I gave it a pretty decent look-over. The tranny fluid was old, but didn't smell burnt, so I planned on changing it when the weather warmed up a bit (I hate working on cars when it's freezing).
Once I dropped the pan, and saw the original yellow factory plug sitting there, I knew the pan had never been off before.


And naturally, the magnet in the corner was completely caked with metal filings. There were even some large slivers stuck to it!

So at this point, past experience says that any idea of a complete system flush was out the window, because doing that will only speed up the demise of this tranny.
So I replaced the TCC (Torque Converter Control) solenoid, slapped a new filter in it, cleaned up the pan, magnet, wiped off the bottom of the valve body & slapped it back together.
I took it for a test spin for a few miles, and the tranny is shifting normally again. Sweet!

I fully expect to be rebuilding this tranny at some point in the near future. But that's okay, I really like the car & love driving it!
Next fix...rear air springs! (soon)