Pablo wrote:
There were a few combinations of cooling systems on these. Do you have a transmission cooler? Does it sit next to an electric fan?
If so, is your electric fan working? The electric fans have been known to bind up with mud, sand, etc. over time. Cleaning them out gets them back up to speed.
I would add a transmission cooler before I would spend money on fancy fluids (if you don't have one).
In case you don't already know: when in the sand and going slow, try to keep it from constantly shifting back and forth. Perhaps use 2nd instead of drive, or put it in 4-low. This will keep the temps lower. Every time you shift back and forth, the trans gets warmer. This is why when the light comes on, it stops you from shifting into higher gears-- it leaves it in one gear until the temp lowers. Stopping and starting at slow speeds in heavy drag (like sand) is hardest on the transmission because it shifts constantly under more pressure and has the least amount of cooling (air moving over it or the cooler).
Thanks for the suggestions.
I have the towing package and the offroad package, so I think I recall that this means I have a transmission cooler. I will check to see if it has a separate fan and if it is working. I think I recall that the transmission cooling radiator just sits in front of the regular radiator and is air cooled without a fan. It was windy and 35 degrees out, so it should have been okay.
I tried it in both 4Lo and Part Time. The light went on in both modes, including after I aired down to 20PSI. It wasn't shifting frequently. I was trying to keep it in one gear, although it seems like it stayed in a lower gear, like first, for a most of the time. After airing down, I was able to get it into a higher gear, maybe second, for more time.
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Trailpixie
http://www.trailpixie.net
04 Limited with offroad package
Frankenlifted
