Can a transmission cause an engine to overheat?
Did you know that an overheating automatic transmission can cause the engine to overheat? If your transmission is not running at optimum levels with clean fluid, it is prone to excessive wear, friction, and slippage – all of which creates a lot of heat that has to be processed by an already hard working cooling system.
What should I do if my transmission is overheating?
What you can do to prevent transmission overheating. Check the transmission fluid level and color. Change the transmission fluid according to your manufacturer’s recommended maintenance schedule. Consider a transmission cooler to help your car’s cooling system.
Why does my transmission heat up in hot weather?
Hot weather contributes to an overheating transmission by raising the resting fluid temperature, so it’s warmer than normal from the get-go. Combined with city driving, your transmission fluid is bound to heat up and wear out sooner, so it pays to check it frequently.
Can a defective solenoid cause a transmission to overheat?
A defective solenoid has to be replaced. A thorough diagnosis of your transmission overheating issues should be able to identify the solenoid as the problem, but sometimes the underlying circuitry can be the issue. Either way, the solenoid should be checked if all other issues have been addressed and your transmission still overheats.
Why does my transmission fluid smell like burning?
Either way, low or bad fluid can cause transmission heat, and transmission heat can burn the fluid – a vicious cycle that ends in transmission failure. Keep your transmission fluid clean and fresh and it most likely won’t burn. If the transmission fluid is burning, you will notice a strong smell that is difficult to describe, but can’t be missed.
What you can do to prevent transmission overheating. Check the transmission fluid level and color. Change the transmission fluid according to your manufacturer’s recommended maintenance schedule. Consider a transmission cooler to help your car’s cooling system.
Hot weather contributes to an overheating transmission by raising the resting fluid temperature, so it’s warmer than normal from the get-go. Combined with city driving, your transmission fluid is bound to heat up and wear out sooner, so it pays to check it frequently.
Either way, low or bad fluid can cause transmission heat, and transmission heat can burn the fluid – a vicious cycle that ends in transmission failure. Keep your transmission fluid clean and fresh and it most likely won’t burn. If the transmission fluid is burning, you will notice a strong smell that is difficult to describe, but can’t be missed.
A defective solenoid has to be replaced. A thorough diagnosis of your transmission overheating issues should be able to identify the solenoid as the problem, but sometimes the underlying circuitry can be the issue. Either way, the solenoid should be checked if all other issues have been addressed and your transmission still overheats.