Im very very bad about keeping my garage clean, so let’s get that out of the way. Over a year ago I had worked on a transmission that had taken on a lot of water. I drained that into my catch pan, and then transferred that to an empty ATF jug to be recycled.
Fast forward a year+ and I decide to do a little garage cleanup. I find several empty jugs, and several full ones. Great, what is new, what is old? Here goes. I pour about a cup from the first jug into the catch pan, brand new ATF, nice! Then I pour the 2nd one….. suddenly I remembered that I had already done this step last July. At any rate this is what water does to transmission fluid when allowed to sit for a long period of time.
The white is some sort of emulsified quasi-solid, almost like congealed fat like if you let the frying pan sit after cooking bacon. I think the moral of the story is probably that if you get water in your trans, let it sit for a year, then drive it.
Fast forward a year+ and I decide to do a little garage cleanup. I find several empty jugs, and several full ones. Great, what is new, what is old? Here goes. I pour about a cup from the first jug into the catch pan, brand new ATF, nice! Then I pour the 2nd one….. suddenly I remembered that I had already done this step last July. At any rate this is what water does to transmission fluid when allowed to sit for a long period of time.
The white is some sort of emulsified quasi-solid, almost like congealed fat like if you let the frying pan sit after cooking bacon. I think the moral of the story is probably that if you get water in your trans, let it sit for a year, then drive it.
