Synthetic 50w Trans oil.

Discuss fixes, upgrades and modifications to your M37

Moderators: Cal_Gary, T. Highway, Monkey Man, robi

Post Reply
bill monahan
CPL
CPL
Posts: 165
Joined: Thu Mar 07, 2013 7:43 am

Synthetic 50w Trans oil.

Post by bill monahan »

OK, picked up a couple of gallons of synthetic 50w manual trans oil. My question is do I just drain out the old 90w and refill with the synthetic or must I somehow flush out the remaining 90w residue?
ZGjethro
SFC
SFC
Posts: 643
Joined: Thu Apr 01, 2010 6:57 pm
Location: Aspen, Colorado
Contact:

Re: Synthetic 50w Trans oil.

Post by ZGjethro »

I'd say if you are really hoping to gain the advantages of better oils, then just do a second fluid change a short while later. It is not like they won't mix, like oil and water. You just want to dilute any remaining conventional oils down to a negligible level
tbone1004
SSGT
SSGT
Posts: 279
Joined: Sun Mar 17, 2013 10:01 am
Location: Litchfield, ME

Re: Synthetic 50w Trans oil.

Post by tbone1004 »

you should be fine just running it as is. not going to hurt anything as long as the oil you got is compliant with brass syncros. You can wipe out what residue you can get at and that will be plenty. Do another oil change in a year or so and all will be well
User avatar
W_A_Watson_II
SFC
SFC
Posts: 627
Joined: Sat Oct 20, 2007 7:02 am
Location: MO
Contact:

Re: Synthetic 50w Trans oil.

Post by W_A_Watson_II »

I did my fluid swap while I had the top cover off, and I used some break cleaner and rags to clean out the residue in the bottom of the case, but all in all it should be fine with a drain and re-fill.
Thanks,
Will
1946 Dodge Power Wagon
1953 Dodge M37 - "Frankenstein"
My 1953 Dodge M37 WEB Site
MSeriesRebuild
1SG
1SG
Posts: 2832
Joined: Sat Oct 20, 2007 4:35 am
Location: Norwood, NC
Contact:

Re: Synthetic 50w Trans oil.

Post by MSeriesRebuild »

The truth is you are asking the impossible question. Oil additive packages that are blended in all quality oils are made up of numerous chemicals. If you mix chemicals that are incompatible with each other, honestly there is no telling what kind of a reaction that could happen. You could create a monster in your gear box. I understand you are speaking of changing to synthetic, truth is it could just as easily happen when changing out to a different petroleum oil lubricant as well. The best policy is to clean out every bit of residual oil that you can. Removing the top and side covers for access is advisable. Aerosol brake cleaner works well for washing off residue, then blow it dry with compressed air when it's clean. This also enables you to visually inspect the condition of the internals to see that all looks healthy, and functions properly before you put in new oil.
Charles Talbert
www.mseriesrebuild.com
ZGjethro
SFC
SFC
Posts: 643
Joined: Thu Apr 01, 2010 6:57 pm
Location: Aspen, Colorado
Contact:

Re: Synthetic 50w Trans oil.

Post by ZGjethro »

MSeriesRebuild wrote:The truth is you are asking the impossible question. Oil additive packages that are blended in all quality oils are made up of numerous chemicals. If you mix chemicals that are incompatible with each other, honestly there is no telling what kind of a reaction that could happen. You could create a monster in your gear box. I understand you are speaking of changing to synthetic, truth is it could just as easily happen when changing out to a different petroleum oil lubricant as well. The best policy is to clean out every bit of residual oil that you can. Removing the top and side covers for access is advisable. Aerosol brake cleaner works well for washing off residue, then blow it dry with compressed air when it's clean. This also enables you to visually inspect the condition of the internals to see that all looks healthy, and functions properly before you put in new oil.
Well there you have it from someone who knows a lot more than me. Disregard my post.
Post Reply