I would be willing to bet its because they use better, longer lasting material in the friction plates like they have done with brakes. I dont know who uses what, but now they have semimetallic, kevlar etc friction plates rather than the old school organic like in my '75 and '85 chevys. With less wear there is less foreign material to filter out. Cleaner fluid and less clogged filter mean longer life.
BTW, speaking of spark plugs above. Around ( roughly ) 100k on my wifes 2008 Tahoe I changed the plugs for the first time ( recommended 100k mi ). They all looked brand new. There was one that is super hard to get to unless you pull the wheel. I ran out of time so left it. I figured I would get to it when I had time, wasnt too worried since the others looked so good. Of course I never got around to it. Sold it at 249,000 mi and it never missed. Original factory spark plug.
Yea, Dodge has been sealing their transmissions since around 2009, I believe. It drives me crazy, because I want to check it. LOL. If it starts slipping you have to take it to a dealer to get it checked. I do like these on top of the motor oil filers dodge has been using. Easiest filter I have ever changed. First time the auto parts place gave me a filter, I though they were crazy.
Just changed my transmission filters on my 12 ram. Sucked to do but went 120k on stock filters and stock oil. Still looked perfect color so hoping to get a good while longer on it.
Yea, Dodge has been sealing their transmissions since around 2009, I believe. It drives me crazy, because I want to check it. LOL. If it starts slipping you have to take it to a dealer to get it checked. I do like these on top of the motor oil filers dodge has been using. Easiest filter I have ever changed. First time the auto parts place gave me a filter, I though they were crazy.
I sure wish mine was on top. I had to take my 16 Ram for its first oil change the other day. First time I haven't changed my oil EVER.
Yea, Dodge has been sealing their transmissions since around 2009, I believe. It drives me crazy, because I want to check it. LOL. If it starts slipping you have to take it to a dealer to get it checked. I do like these on top of the motor oil filers dodge has been using. Easiest filter I have ever changed. First time the auto parts place gave me a filter, I though they were crazy.
Yep. My wifes Jeep GC has the 3.6 in it, and the filter is on top. Easiest oil changes ever. My 2014 Ram 1500 with the 5.7 has it underneath on the passenger side, and in a bad spot. I can never get it out of there without oil dripping all over various parts under it. I have resorted to putting a piece of aluminum foil over the components so it drips on the foil, and then carefully trying to fold it up without the oil going off the sides. I usually end up still cleaning some oil off various items. My first Dodge 1500 (2003) had the 4.7 in it. The filter was under the truck on the drivers side, and it had a little ramp under it for the oil to drip down into a pan once you pulled the filter. I liked that design. But the top-of-the-engine filters are awesome. Wish they would do that with the 5.7's. (or do they now?)
If it's a ZF, I'd change the fluid anyway at 60k intervals. BMW tried to do this with the ZF 6HP transmission, until ZF stepped in and posted that the fluid should be changed every 60k.
I also changed my 4Runner's fluid at 100k. I don't do "lifetime fluid".
I've read that the lifetime transmission "designation" gets the manufacturers out of some fees/taxes associated with replaceable fluids and the environmental impacts. My Toyota FJ had lifetime transmission fluid. It developed a shutter at certain speeds. Online forums mentioned a change of the lifetime transmission fluid as a solution. Many people went and got new transmissions to fix the problem. I had my lifetime fluid changed on mine and it solved the problem.
Comment