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Ok, I've mentioned getting my car out of a shop after 11 yrs. So here's the deal. The shop mated the AOD to the 351, but they didn't put any fluid in the torque converter and the eng. is in the car now.
Do I need to pull the tranny and put fluid in the converter? Or can I just fill it upon eng. start up?
I heard conflicting answers.
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The front pump is driven by flats on the snout of the torque convertor which is bolted to the flex plate. I wouldn't start the engine up just yet. Crank the motor with the starter for short spurts, not enough to get the starter hot, but short spurts between letting it cool down and eventually the fluid will get into the convertor. Watch your fluid level before cranking and after you crank a while. Hope that is clear as mud.
Last edited by retired 65 (8/23/2013 8:33 PM)
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So would cranking it, without fuel be a way to do it? Just so that everything rotates until the fluid in trany all gets put in there? Is that what you mean?
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Yeah, shut off the fuel. If you have no intention of firing off the engine, no sense in washing off any lube on the cyl walls.
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also just take out the spark plugs,, that puppy will spin spin spin
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Ok, will do. Boy that sure is easier than taking the trany out! Thanks guys
Last edited by Ozblitz (8/24/2013 9:22 PM)
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If you have a flat tappet cam in the new 351W, and the cam has NOT been broken in yet, I would NOT do that procedure. Altough it is a good method to get the oil to the converter, it is also a good way to wipe out a cam lobe if the cam is not already broken in.
When a new cam is installed, it is coated with a special lube. As you crank it slowly, that lube is going to get wiped off the lobes without the benefit of "splash" oil, which is the only way a cam lobe gets lubricated by engine oil. That is why a cam manufacturer will tell you to run the engine at 2000 RPM for 20 minutes or so to break in a new flat tappet cam. At 2000 RPM, there is lots of oil being tossed around in the crankcase, and the cam lobes get plenty of lube. Running it slow, or cranking it alot without starting and going immediately to high RPM is a good way to wipe out a lobe.
If you have a roller cam, then go for it, because it won't hurt the cam at all.
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you could remove the pushrods to take the stress off the cam lobes
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GT350 wrote:
you could remove the pushrods to take the stress off the cam lobes
Well.......might as well just drop the trans considering the work time involved.
If you got'a roller then spinning it should be a good fix
I always wondered......(here goes) with a flat tappet cam,on break-in.....would a quart or two extra oil in pan be beneficial?!
6sally6
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If there is a drain plug. You can back fill it. Use a squeeze bottle and force the fluid in.
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