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Brian556 Samba Member
Joined: December 15, 2008 Posts: 56 Location: Atlanta
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Posted: Thu Jun 10, 2010 4:22 pm Post subject: Manual Transmission Drain Plug - metal on plug |
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Hi All,
I drained my manual transmission fluid today and the magnet had some metal bits on it. See picture. I do not believe the fluid has ever been changed. I have never used the transmission but I was told it shifted fine. Should I be concerned or am I going to run into any problems?
Thanks,
Brian
_________________ 1985 Westy Weekender EJ22 |
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syncrosimon Samba Member
Joined: November 20, 2008 Posts: 257 Location: Devon, England
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Posted: Thu Jun 10, 2010 5:21 pm Post subject: |
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If that is the original oil after 20 years that is not too bad. Will have to see if the box whines, if not then it's most likely OK. _________________ 1991 16" 2.1 DJ Syncro factory hightop ex Finnish Army Ambulance, now sold.
Thinking about Thing or 181 (182) ownership. |
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anthonywesty Samba Member
Joined: May 06, 2007 Posts: 107 Location: Sunshine State
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Wildthings Samba Member
Joined: March 13, 2005 Posts: 50337
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Posted: Thu Jun 10, 2010 8:36 pm Post subject: |
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This is why the magnets there. Your oil is probably not that old as the magnet is actually pretty clean compared to many I have seen. |
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gears Samba Member
Joined: October 28, 2002 Posts: 4391 Location: Tamarack, Bend, Kailua
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Posted: Fri Jun 11, 2010 10:11 am Post subject: |
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Somewhat beyond normal, I'd say. The R&P is likely what's wearing. |
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climber2377 Samba Member
Joined: November 20, 2013 Posts: 230 Location: northeast
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Posted: Tue Apr 15, 2014 4:57 pm Post subject: |
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i had this same thing happen to me today, so i figured i check the forum for old threads. glad i did. i feel better now. anyone else have a photo of their fire cracker magnet they'd like to share? my 84 with a MT 191-1 gave me this today...
also i gave it the old IV to get the gear oil in. slow and steady... i figured 3 quarts should be good... i think i read that they lowered the amount from 3.2 quarts somewhere. anyone else want to chime in on this as well?
_________________ [email protected] 84 Westy 1.9 waterboxer > 2001 Legacy 2.5L sohc w/ subarugears 5MT Ty754 |
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70coupyel Samba Member
Joined: September 06, 2006 Posts: 1657 Location: So.Cal
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Posted: Tue Apr 15, 2014 5:06 pm Post subject: |
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3.2 is correct. _________________
TheAndante wrote: |
Saying that specs are different than dimensions doesn't make sense. Porsche specs/VW specs/engineering specs are nothing but a series of dimensions,sizes,percentages,measurements, etc. |
http://www.thesamba.com/vw/forum/viewtopic.php?t=338946&highlight=
70 KG Coup
83 Westy Waterboxer |
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vanagonjr Samba Member
Joined: October 07, 2010 Posts: 3431 Location: Dartmouth, Mass.
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Posted: Tue Apr 15, 2014 6:53 pm Post subject: |
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Funny, I had a 1980 Vanagon tranny that I thought was making noise. Pulled the plug, it looked like yours. So I bought a used one at a junkyard, pulled the plug and, again, found about the same debris as you did. A friend with multiple Porsches and spare gear boxes, starting pulling drain plugs out of "known good" 911 transaxles. All most all of them were worse than mine, and one had a broken metal piece in it
Later, when I changed the CV's and found one was toast - the likely culprit of the noise. _________________ John - 86 Wolfsburg Westfalia "Weekender"
Flint reversed 1.8T W/Passat 5-Speed
LiMBO (late model bus club) www.limbobus.org
LiMBO is on Facebook too! https://www.facebook.com/groups/
FAQ thread: http://www.thesamba.com/vw/forum/viewtopic.php?t=525798 |
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JDub113 Samba Member
Joined: June 08, 2009 Posts: 758 Location: Reno
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Posted: Sat Apr 15, 2017 4:37 pm Post subject: Re: Manual Transmission Drain Plug - metal |
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Instead of starting the same thread, wtf came out with the gear oil today? I'm ok with the metal firework display but this other stuff seems bad...
Trans has a whine if I'm on the gas any amount. What broke and how long do I have? Which is really just a guess...
Been driving it like this for a year.
_________________ 84 Wolfsburg Edition Westy |
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gears Samba Member
Joined: October 28, 2002 Posts: 4391 Location: Tamarack, Bend, Kailua
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Posted: Sat Apr 15, 2017 5:00 pm Post subject: Re: Manual Transmission Drain Plug - metal |
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Hmm .. a bit difficult to downshift into 2nd perhaps? Those are pieces of one of the 6 spring steel shift rail guides that's apparently disintegrated. Not good to have those bits slinging around inside .. _________________ aka Pablo, Geary
9.36 @ 146 in '86 Hot & Sticky
'90 Syncro Westy SVX
'87 Syncro GL 2.5
https://guardtransaxle.com |
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JDub113 Samba Member
Joined: June 08, 2009 Posts: 758 Location: Reno
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Posted: Sat Apr 15, 2017 6:40 pm Post subject: Re: Manual Transmission Drain Plug - metal |
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Trans runs normal... I didn't expect to find that at all. Downshifts in all gears very well. What I really need, is 10 HOURS out of it if it's going to die. Syncrofest and back. _________________ 84 Wolfsburg Edition Westy |
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gears Samba Member
Joined: October 28, 2002 Posts: 4391 Location: Tamarack, Bend, Kailua
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Posted: Sat Apr 15, 2017 7:13 pm Post subject: Re: Manual Transmission Drain Plug - metal |
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Good luck so far .. you've retrieved half of what was dispersed when the sleeve cracked in half. _________________ aka Pablo, Geary
9.36 @ 146 in '86 Hot & Sticky
'90 Syncro Westy SVX
'87 Syncro GL 2.5
https://guardtransaxle.com |
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Abscate Samba Member
Joined: October 05, 2014 Posts: 22639 Location: NYC/Upstate/ROW
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Posted: Sat Apr 15, 2017 7:55 pm Post subject: Re: Manual Transmission Drain Plug - metal |
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You'll get your 10 hours. I guarantee it or I'll eat my hat or bald spot _________________ .ssS! |
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david2676 Samba Member
Joined: September 06, 2008 Posts: 452 Location: san jose, ca
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Posted: Sat Apr 15, 2017 9:11 pm Post subject: Re: Manual Transmission Drain Plug - metal |
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For what it is worth I just had my transaxle rebuilt ...
When I was on the gas loud whine .. off the gas it would return to normal ... was caused by the R @ P moving in and out of position ... this caused wear to the R&P .. which will run you about $1000 for the part only.
I also had some cracked shift selectors or guides whatever those things are called ...
Ken porter said I could run the worn RP it might see another 30,000 and then start making noise or more or maybe less...
Now that it is rebuilt it is super quiet ... little stiff getting into gear at times but I am sure that will settle down... Now the loudest part of my Van are the wheel noise... !!!! _________________ 64 bug
91 Vanagon/ Subaru swap Westfalia |
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Waldi Samba Member
Joined: February 28, 2014 Posts: 1752 Location: Germany
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Posted: Sun Apr 16, 2017 12:07 am Post subject: Re: Manual Transmission Drain Plug - metal |
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If you drive with the whine about a year, your r+p is already gone.
And than ppl complain about weak vanogon boxes/r+pinions |
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dhaavers Samba Member
Joined: March 19, 2010 Posts: 7756 Location: NE MN (tinyurl.com/dhaaverslocation)
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Posted: Thu Aug 10, 2017 5:42 pm Post subject: Re: Manual Transmission Drain Plug - metal |
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I'll play...
Today dropped old tranny in preparation for "new" rebuild arriving tomorrow. No sense paying
to ship the oil with my core return, so I drained it & checked the plug, just for giggles:
FWIW, this is the result of 35k trouble-free miles since last drain (accounting for slight "fuzz" at the tip
o' the magnet) & a mere 500 miles limping home since the definitive symptoms of classic 3-4 slider
hub failure (certainly the source of the heavier chunky flakes at the bottom of the plug/sump)...
Glad the new box is on the way...
- Dave _________________ 86 White Wolfsburg Westy Weekender
"The WonderVan"
<EDITED TO PROTECT INNOCENT PIXELS> |
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Sodo Samba Member
Joined: July 06, 2007 Posts: 9603 Location: Western WA
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Posted: Thu Aug 10, 2017 8:03 pm Post subject: Re: Manual Transmission Drain Plug - metal |
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dhaavers wrote: |
FWIW, this is the result of 35k trouble-free miles since last drain (accounting for slight "fuzz" at the tip
o' the magnet) & a mere 500 miles limping home since the definitive symptoms of classic 3-4 slider
hub failure (certainly the source of the heavier chunky flakes at the bottom of the plug/sump)... |
A magnet gets much hairier when you let it sit motionless then drain it "cold". The magnet has hours to rebuild it's afro overnight. The normal way is to drive the car, get it warm, and stir up the oil then quickly drain it to get the most swarf out of the trans. The (violent) turbulence washes much of that stuff off, and you get a much smaller magnet afro. Can't compare the two types, the motionless afro is always going to be much bigger.
Incidentally I don't see any 3-4 slider hub parts in the pic, only flakes. Slider hub parts are "broken chunks". Those are probably bearing flakes from the pinion bearing and mainshaft bearing, and R&P tooth flank flakes (??). Why do you say your 3-4 hub broke?
My opinion....
35k is too long for an old trans. Once a trans starts to generate swarf it's best to change oil often and get the swarf out. Metal-contaminated oil is a grinding paste, accelerating the wear, and ruins other parts that might be used again in a rebuild. Contaminated specialty oil is specialty grinding paste. Clean cheap oil drained often is better than contaminated specialty oil that costs too much to dump out.
Tranny oil is like underwear. If soiled you have to change it, period. "And what if you get in a car wreck?" Brand name makes no difference, compared to cleanliness. Cleanliness is much higher importance. And the older it gets the more often you have to change things out.
People don't change out contaminated gear oil, and they PAY dearly, and still won't change it. It's because it doesn't fail stuff overnight. And cuz it's no fun. Experienced mechanics will tell you it's OK to run contaminated gear oil, it's very common. But not true. Well it IS OK I suppose; for example it's legal.
But there can be no doubt it's a bad deal to have the oil you expect to lubricate your junk actually grinding it away. If your trans had nerve endings it would chafe like underwear, you know, like crusty......but enuff of that.... If you ASK anyone, the advice is inevitably "gear oil? don't worry about it". Hmmmm. Try asking if it's logical. It's not - contaminated gear oil is detrimental, period.
I think a trans could go 35k miles in the middle of its life, when it's NOT generating (much) swarf. But certainly not after 100k.
Well yours broke a 3/4 slider hub, not much incentive to "save parts" if ur gonna have a catastrophic failure anyway. Which you can't know, HOWEVER if you were gonna rebuild your same trans it's better not to grind up all your precious OEM stuff. Like the Syncro guys sometimes want to keep their own trans if not too old (rather than take an unknown off the shelf). _________________
'90 Westy EJ25, 2Peloquins, 3knobs, pressure-oiled GT mainshaft, filtered, cooled gearbox
'87 Tintop w 47k 53k, '12 SmallCar EJ25, cooled filtered gearbox
....KTMs, GasGas, SPOT mtb |
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Merian Samba Member
Joined: January 04, 2014 Posts: 5212 Location: Orygun
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Posted: Thu Aug 10, 2017 8:29 pm Post subject: Re: Manual Transmission Drain Plug - metal |
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_________________ .... |
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dhaavers Samba Member
Joined: March 19, 2010 Posts: 7756 Location: NE MN (tinyurl.com/dhaaverslocation)
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Posted: Thu Aug 10, 2017 8:58 pm Post subject: Re: Manual Transmission Drain Plug - metal |
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Sodo wrote: |
Why do you say your 3-4 hub broke? |
NEVER any noise or trouble for 45k miles, then last road trip suddenly stuck in 4th a couple
times, managed to get it out, then grinding into & out of 3rd & 4th the last ~350 miles...
- Dave _________________ 86 White Wolfsburg Westy Weekender
"The WonderVan"
<EDITED TO PROTECT INNOCENT PIXELS> |
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Sodo Samba Member
Joined: July 06, 2007 Posts: 9603 Location: Western WA
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Posted: Thu Aug 10, 2017 9:57 pm Post subject: Re: Manual Transmission Drain Plug - metal |
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3-4 hub can crack bit by bit, and staying completely "together". The first crack probably makes no difference, and perhaps the 2nd crack, it still shifts OK, performing its duty. But possibly not shifting "well" and as such, the trans is generating metal bits (swarf) in the oil, which is fooking up your bearings and grinding valuable gears & shafts quicker towards death.
It generally cracks in 3 places and the 3rd crack is when shifting problems are significant. At the point of shifting difficulty, it may hold together for awhile, But soon will fail catastrophically, letting loose chunks that the gears may ingest and bust up important stuff.
I suppose you already know this but just for forum info etc, theres no way to inspect the 3-4 hub OTHER than observing what comes off (if chunks) and is caught on your drainplug magnet. But for that you have to be looking. Which isn't easy.
Pretty much nobody's doing this. Most people think that "if their trans only has 20k miles left, why bother? -just run it out". But the thing is, if you're keeping the oil clean it could run a lot longer. People are running a horrible grinding soup and getting 20,000 miles, it stands to reason that clean oil will go a lot farther.
Nobody can test this. Fred runs a horrible soup but he doesn't know how many miles. Barney changes his oil but he's got a big engine and a crap rebuild. No way to compare these. But clean oil lies on the side of logical proper maintenance, bigtime.
Well anyway, I've been studying the Vanagon trans pretty intently for the past couple years and learned some stuff. One of which is my own experience neglecting the trans (as everyone does !) Its an often neglected component for several reasons, one main problem is its far beneath the car. And the other is gear oil is unpleasant.
One thing to know is your new trans won't go 150k, 200k miles. Its a bunch of old parts with (hopefully) new bearings & a modern 3-4 hub. Its gonna generate a lot more swarf than a new OEM trans. Unless you enjoyed the R&R + $$$$ You have to get that stuff outta your "new" trans too. _________________
'90 Westy EJ25, 2Peloquins, 3knobs, pressure-oiled GT mainshaft, filtered, cooled gearbox
'87 Tintop w 47k 53k, '12 SmallCar EJ25, cooled filtered gearbox
....KTMs, GasGas, SPOT mtb |
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