Alrighty, picking this up again...
I found some guy on eBay selling a Timken bearing kit for the A604. The kit outer bag was torn open, but the bearings were sealed, and the kit bag appeared to contain most of two kits instead of just one. That's how I solved that problem, plus extras for next time. insert nervous laughter here
I did buy some LubeGard Blue Assemblee Goo, a tacky assembly lube recommended by one of the folks on Allpar. This stuff is awesome and really helped with "gluing" parts together so they stay in position during assembly. It's specifically designed to be compatible with ATF and melt out into the fluid after assembly.
While I was slapping all the thrust bearings in, I found two things of note.
There is a thrust bearing trapped inside a planetary set, which cannot be replaced as the shafts for the planet gears in that set are welded in place. I'm guessing this is a rebuilder fix for a specific problem or to prevent a common comeback - regardless, bearing wasn't able to be changed, but it rolled smoothly by hand so no concerns there.
I also found that the sun gear in the rear planetary set had two broken teeth. I found no evidence of these teeth being elsewhere in the unit, but if they were pulverized into a fine dust, it'd be hard to find them. I went back and forth in my head about if I should do anything about that, reasoning that perhaps the gear was like this before it was last rebuilt and the rebuilder decided to leave it. But then I bought one on eBay for 20 bucks and put that in, instead. Learning that the 41TE is the basis for the 62TE (when learning that this part is common between them) didn't surprise me at all. At work we have a fleet of 3.6/62TE minivans, and the transmission behaviour between those and this car is shockingly alike. If you told me there was 90s-era 41TE TCM code running in the modern PCMs driving 62TEs I would totally believe that.
When I moved on to reassembling the wizard magic device - the clutches - I found more self-inflicted problems. I completely mangled a couple clutch discs on that first re-assembly attempt, due to alignment problems during reassembly. It sounds like this is a common mistake, but that didn't make me feel better about it. I bought a set of clutches and used the new ones for every spot that I had disassembled to that point (everything in that drum). I did not tear the unit down further because, between healthy CVIs (TCM tracks and can report inferred clutch wear, known as Clutch Volume Index) and the condition of all the frictions I could touch, and the lack of wanting to break more things, it just didn't make any sense to tear down any further at that point.
I referenced both of the following during the reassembly and I strongly recommend these resources to anyone who wants mess around with this stuff.
Removed transfer gear cover to unbend it (don't let the unit sit on it like I did). Unbent the cover and reinstalled.
Mated reman converter with transmission. Took a little manipulating but finally got it to drop down where it belongs.
Installed new output shaft seals.
Replaced rear main seal. Crank is grooved so this may leak again, but it was just a little wet, not really leaky-leaky, so I'm optimistic.
Reinstalled transmission in chassis.
Dropped the pan (again; had reinstalled it to protect valve body during manhandling), replaced the filter. Found previous filter o-ring was torn. Installed new pan equipped with drain plug. Transferred pan magnet from old pan to new. Used only the clean rubber gasket included in the filter kit, no RTV or sealants, we'll see if I have any regrets soon I'm sure. Being a new pan it's nice and straight so probably fine.
Air-checked the in-radiator transmission cooler. Found no obstruction. Installed auxiliary cooler in series after the in-radiator cooler. Had only 3/8" hose on-hand, the fittings seemed closer to 5/16, once again we'll see if I have any regrets soon I'm sure. Picked an unusual way of mounting the aux cooler: drilled 4 holes in the support in front of the condenser and used the included-with-cooler round zip tie strip things to stick it onto that support, with foam pads standing it off of the support. Seems like it'll work well enough.
Replaced TCM with the one purchased on eBay with the newest available programming.
Reassembled the cooling system. Finished bolting together trans and engine. Reinstalled starter and front engine mount. Reinstalled CV axles and reassembled front suspension. Filled transmission with fluid.
Test drive found that I have all of my gears, and I have functional converter lockup!
No codes after about 45km of drive time in mixed conditions.
No fluid leakage parked overnight. The concerns I sought to address appear to be resolved.
There was a temporary condition for the first few shifts from P/R/N to a forward drive gear, which was a loud bang noise at gear engagement. It isn't happening anymore and the unit remains quiet and well-behaved.
I do believe a couple items require further attention:
I found some guy on eBay selling a Timken bearing kit for the A604. The kit outer bag was torn open, but the bearings were sealed, and the kit bag appeared to contain most of two kits instead of just one. That's how I solved that problem, plus extras for next time. insert nervous laughter here
I did buy some LubeGard Blue Assemblee Goo, a tacky assembly lube recommended by one of the folks on Allpar. This stuff is awesome and really helped with "gluing" parts together so they stay in position during assembly. It's specifically designed to be compatible with ATF and melt out into the fluid after assembly.
While I was slapping all the thrust bearings in, I found two things of note.
There is a thrust bearing trapped inside a planetary set, which cannot be replaced as the shafts for the planet gears in that set are welded in place. I'm guessing this is a rebuilder fix for a specific problem or to prevent a common comeback - regardless, bearing wasn't able to be changed, but it rolled smoothly by hand so no concerns there.
I also found that the sun gear in the rear planetary set had two broken teeth. I found no evidence of these teeth being elsewhere in the unit, but if they were pulverized into a fine dust, it'd be hard to find them. I went back and forth in my head about if I should do anything about that, reasoning that perhaps the gear was like this before it was last rebuilt and the rebuilder decided to leave it. But then I bought one on eBay for 20 bucks and put that in, instead. Learning that the 41TE is the basis for the 62TE (when learning that this part is common between them) didn't surprise me at all. At work we have a fleet of 3.6/62TE minivans, and the transmission behaviour between those and this car is shockingly alike. If you told me there was 90s-era 41TE TCM code running in the modern PCMs driving 62TEs I would totally believe that.
When I moved on to reassembling the wizard magic device - the clutches - I found more self-inflicted problems. I completely mangled a couple clutch discs on that first re-assembly attempt, due to alignment problems during reassembly. It sounds like this is a common mistake, but that didn't make me feel better about it. I bought a set of clutches and used the new ones for every spot that I had disassembled to that point (everything in that drum). I did not tear the unit down further because, between healthy CVIs (TCM tracks and can report inferred clutch wear, known as Clutch Volume Index) and the condition of all the frictions I could touch, and the lack of wanting to break more things, it just didn't make any sense to tear down any further at that point.
I referenced both of the following during the reassembly and I strongly recommend these resources to anyone who wants mess around with this stuff.
- ATRA's "plain English" rebuilding procedures for the 41TE aka "41TEBook.doc"
- Southern Illinois University's video documenting the overhaul of a newer variant of the 41TE, in a classroom setting, oriented towards students in a trade school
Removed transfer gear cover to unbend it (don't let the unit sit on it like I did). Unbent the cover and reinstalled.
Mated reman converter with transmission. Took a little manipulating but finally got it to drop down where it belongs.
Installed new output shaft seals.
Replaced rear main seal. Crank is grooved so this may leak again, but it was just a little wet, not really leaky-leaky, so I'm optimistic.
Reinstalled transmission in chassis.
Dropped the pan (again; had reinstalled it to protect valve body during manhandling), replaced the filter. Found previous filter o-ring was torn. Installed new pan equipped with drain plug. Transferred pan magnet from old pan to new. Used only the clean rubber gasket included in the filter kit, no RTV or sealants, we'll see if I have any regrets soon I'm sure. Being a new pan it's nice and straight so probably fine.
Air-checked the in-radiator transmission cooler. Found no obstruction. Installed auxiliary cooler in series after the in-radiator cooler. Had only 3/8" hose on-hand, the fittings seemed closer to 5/16, once again we'll see if I have any regrets soon I'm sure. Picked an unusual way of mounting the aux cooler: drilled 4 holes in the support in front of the condenser and used the included-with-cooler round zip tie strip things to stick it onto that support, with foam pads standing it off of the support. Seems like it'll work well enough.
Replaced TCM with the one purchased on eBay with the newest available programming.
Reassembled the cooling system. Finished bolting together trans and engine. Reinstalled starter and front engine mount. Reinstalled CV axles and reassembled front suspension. Filled transmission with fluid.
Test drive found that I have all of my gears, and I have functional converter lockup!
No codes after about 45km of drive time in mixed conditions.
No fluid leakage parked overnight. The concerns I sought to address appear to be resolved.
There was a temporary condition for the first few shifts from P/R/N to a forward drive gear, which was a loud bang noise at gear engagement. It isn't happening anymore and the unit remains quiet and well-behaved.
I do believe a couple items require further attention:
- The TCM reports the shift lever position on my scan tool. It is possible to position the shifter "in a gear" but have the TCM report just a blank space. The switches that sense shift lever position may require cleaning or replacement.
- With the converter locked, engine RPM and turbine RPM are supposed to be approximately identical (due to lockup). However, turbine RPM reports a little lower. Since it isn't setting a code, it probably is not slipping, which means there's a sensor or sensor circuit problem for the turbine speed sensor.
- With the new TCM, the scan tool does not show the status of the brake pedal but the old one did. I haven't replaced the brake light switch yet, no changes in that area. Not sure what's up with that. The brake light switch is already being changed because I feel the brake lights should turn on with less pedal effort than I am experiencing.
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