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Hi all,

Last summer a customer brought a transaxle to me complaining about a second and third gear grind. He said third would only shift if the engine dropped in RPM. The trans was in a 74 car.

Popped off the bottom cover after we acid cleaned the case to take a look at the ring. The lube was horrible in color and I was expecting the worst---WOW---the ring looked good with no visible rust and I have seen much worse at this point so thinking to my self--maybe this customer dodged a bullet.

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When I pulled the gear case from the main case---OMG---the nightmare began. The gears were stained rusty baby poop brown. There was visible pitting on every surface above the lube line on all of the mild steal surfaces. I called the customer to try and get a history on the car. He purchased it years before and just never changed the gear lube. He was the second owner and frankly it appears the lube was never changed----from 1974 until 2013. That may be a bit long??????

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I pulled the gear clusters and stripped the pinion. The moister had intruded into the pinion splines and started to pit them. The gears are harder than the pinion splines and they were under the lube so they looked OK----even first was good and the synchro had 43 thousands clearance---I prefer at least 30 thousands minim synchro clearance on a rebuild. This is debatable and depends upon what the final usage plan is for the car.

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What brand and spec fluid do you recommend for a Zf transaxle?

Shah[/QUOTE]

Shah,

I have always ran Valvoline and have had no issues for 38 years. There are some full synthetics that will not work properly. I have used Valvoline's synthetic blend without issue.

Did you get your cam issue worked out? Hope so.

Kirk
quote:
Originally posted by JFB #05177:
mine has been sitting for 30 years and rusting above the fluid line is my big fear. hopefully it can be saved also.


I would not run it without pulling-er, removing the bottom cover and gear case form the main case. You do not have to pull the back cover---this procedure will expose the all of the gear clusters for inspection. If you have issues, they will quickly appear. The case to case seal is gasket-less (use Yamaha #4) so the only gasket you will need is the bottom cover---some rebuilders do not run a gasket down there---I do. There are shims between the bottom cover and 2 side cover through bolts---keep them in order. There are procedures to the re-assembly I use if you want to try the inspection yourself---drop me a note and I'll get you a list.

Otherwise, depending upon where you are, there are several extremely good trans-rebuilders.
Here is a view of a side cover removed and cleaned. You can clearly see the lube line and rust line from many years of sitting in a non temp controlled environment. The transaxles breathe so they heat up and expel internal air---cool down and suck in external air. Tiny bits of moisture come in---you drive it and blend the water into the lube---40 years of this will become a problem.

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Here is a shot of third gear with the synchronizer installed. The synchro is on the right side of the gear with the tiny teeth. There should be up to 50 thousands of clearance between the teeth of the synchro and the teeth of the synchro collar mounted to the gear. The pushes against the gear collar slowing or speeding up the gear depending if you're up-shifting or down shifting. On ZF's, most of the time the collar is worn out rather then the synchro because of a design defect. The later M1 and the current RBT transaxle use the later better design collar and synchro through 3ed gear. Forth and fifth rarely wear out in the lube fill level is correct and changed a bit more that every 40 years. Now I do not have documented proof the 40 year time period other than the rebuild posted---just IMHO---OMG!.

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Here is a comparison view of the lube removed from the trans and a drip of new lube used during re-assembly. The drained lube was water-muddy from the gear blending it had recently had from the car's last drive. The dark drip came out of the differential after it was removed from the main case.

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A view of the input shaft center bearing.

Please ask questions or add to the post any experiences you may have had. Counter point are always welcome---always looking for a better way or more usable information for future repairs. Last post until Monday----thank you for looking.

Kirk

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Kirk do you think this box was exposed to water at some stage? Maybe the car was stored outdoors for years with the boot removed? Driven off a bridge? Was there water in the lube? I just think this is an exception because this would apply to every gearbox and diff, not just the ZF and I have never seen its like before. It is scary indeed.
quote:
Originally posted by PanteraWanabe:
Kirk do you think this box was exposed to water at some stage? Maybe the car was stored outdoors for years with the boot removed? Driven off a bridge? Was there water in the lube? I just think this is an exception because this would apply to every gearbox and diff, not just the ZF and I have never seen its like before. It is scary indeed.


I am guessing about the water intrusion. Based on what the current owner has told me, he bought the car from the original owner who lived in Michigan which is where he lives. The car is totally original---including the trans which had the original old clear tubing vent hose. Now here in the summer there can be extremely high humidity with big temp swings from day to night The ZF case has a much larger air space due to the main case size to house the differential. Also the original location of the vent tube was tied to the rear wheel well cross bar and ended up stuck inside the right rear wheel opening. If the car was rain driven, I would imagine the vent tube could pick-up from the right rear tire and as the trans cools, pull in the tube moisture. The second owner says he never sprayed off the trans but if the first owner took it the used a high pleasure washer on or near the side axels, the water car blow by the seals---just guessing on all if this. Regardless you should change the lube at least once a year if your car is in a high moisture and/or humid environment just for safety---IMHO.

As far as other gearboxes, it's logical to assume if the trans is similar in size, material make-up with the case, gears, lube amount and venting end location and length, it should pull water in a similar amount and if the lube has never been changed in 40 years, it may look just as bad from neglect.

Just guessing about all of this---just making the point that out of site in this case can not be out of mind--although if your trans ends up looking like this one you may loose your mind!
ZF's own service manual says, 'for passenger and racing cars, change the gearbox oil after the 1st 4-5000 km with further changes after 16-20,000 km. The early (blue) Owners Manual says to change ZF lube at 12K, 24K, 36K and 48K, but that note was left out of the more common red Owners Manual.

Note that you CANNOT drain all the lube out of a ZF, even if you remove the assembly and tip it up on its nose in a bucket overnight with the bottom cover off! There will always be at least a pint caught inside, which dilutes any lube changes. Anyone who's ever disassembled a ZF knows to expect a big mess when the cases are separated.
Here is a view of another trans that came in with all of the ring bolts broken and the ring spinning on the carrier. If you have a crack on your main case or bottom cover, it would be best to drain it and pull the cover for a first hand visual inspection before this happens of worse.

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Back to the rusty one. Here are the gear clusters re-assembled ready to install in the gear case. The 4th-5th max thickness thrust washer had to be ground to size making the final end clearance on the input shaft 8 thousands which is tight.

No school tomorrow for Alex----another snow day here in NW Ohio---what a winter we are having.

More later---thank you for looking.

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