Series I L27 (1992-1994 SE,SLE, SSE) & Series II L36 (1995-1999 SE, SSE, SLE) and common problems for the Series I and II L67 (all supercharged models 92-99) Including Olds 88's, Olds LSS's, Olds 98 91-96, Buick Lesabres and Park Avenue 91-96. Please use General Chat for non-mechanical issues, and Performance and Brainstorming for improvements.
thinking seriously about a trans temp guage for the lesabre, just to keep an eye on things with this kinda mileage (110K+).
What do you guys recommend guage-wise, and about how hard are these guages to install on a 4T60e?
i'm not looking to spend a whole lot. i don't need a fancy glowing or digital guage or something, just a simple analog unit.
call me Steve...
HAI, full 2.5" exhaust, resonator delete, Pioneer Audio, F17 transaxle, Toyo Versado LX 215/70/15's
I don't know about a '94, but obd-II vehicles already have a tranny temp sensor, you just need the right software or scanner to monitor it through the obd2-port
wow...that's actually super-convenient. anyone know if '94 was similar?
i have a feeling it doesn't, however, since now that you say that, i think i may know where a stock one would be installed. there's an empty threaded hole about 5/8 in. in diameter on the top of the transaxle directly under the TB. could that be where a temp probe could be installed?
call me Steve...
HAI, full 2.5" exhaust, resonator delete, Pioneer Audio, F17 transaxle, Toyo Versado LX 215/70/15's
hmm, ok i gotcha. welp, assuming i'm gonna go ahead and install an external guage, anyone have any tips on install, or know of a good tutorial? search has failed me yet again :(
call me Steve...
HAI, full 2.5" exhaust, resonator delete, Pioneer Audio, F17 transaxle, Toyo Versado LX 215/70/15's
Not sure about the Buick but on my '94 Bonnie, I can get temps from the OBD 1.5 port with my scanner.
As for the place to put a sensor for an external gauge, well, I've had a few different suggestions. The trans shop suggested installing a "T" fitting on the pressure side of the cooler and putting it there. Others have suggested using the pressure test port on top of the transmission below the TB. However the trans shop says that the test port may not be as accurate because of "stale" fluid. ie, the fluid is not circulating at that point, just sitting there.
wjcollier07 wrote:Darn it John...now you got me thinking mine's not big enough.
2001 F150 a basic six cyl with 5 speed manual trans.
'66 Piper Cherokee 360 CID , 180 hp, 155 mph @ 2500 rpm, drop in K&N filter.
ah, so i could indeed get temps from a scanner...i hadn't really thought at all about getting a scanner since i figured OBD 1.5 wouldn't provide enough detailed info to justify the price...
i also have no tranny cooler...what about some sort of fitting welded into the transmission pan for the sensor to go into?
call me Steve...
HAI, full 2.5" exhaust, resonator delete, Pioneer Audio, F17 transaxle, Toyo Versado LX 215/70/15's
Not a lot of room there and the pan is very shallow..
The 1994 3800/4T60-E did have a temp sensor in the trans at the lowest point of the valve body to measure the fluid temps... The PCM monitors this and will display the trans temp on a scan tool..
sweet...any advice on an inexpensive scan tool/diagnostic unit i could look into? maybe something small that i could keep in a specific spot in the car to monitor different things?
call me Steve...
HAI, full 2.5" exhaust, resonator delete, Pioneer Audio, F17 transaxle, Toyo Versado LX 215/70/15's
Actron CP9145. Scans for KR, tranny temps, etc. Not a great 96+ scanner but does the job. Has a ton of scanning parameters for the OBD 1.5 but I couldn't hook up to my 92 OBD1 Grand Prix. I got it for 99 with free shipping from Amazon.com.
1999 Buick Regal GS
1992 Pontiac Grand Prix 3.1 (the Backup)
2001 Chevy Venture (aka Rosie) Wife's Ride
1994 Pontiac Bonneville SSEi "Black Betty" NOW PACKIN' 2.5" OF FUN! (retired to the junkyard up above)
A lot of us here use the Actron CP9111. This is actually an OBD 1 reader and needs a custom made cable to use it on the OBD 1.5 cars.
There used to be a member here who would make up the cable for a reasonable price his user name was "slug" I believe. I haven't seen him on for a long time, problably someone else can make up a cable if you enquire about it.
wjcollier07 wrote:Darn it John...now you got me thinking mine's not big enough.
2001 F150 a basic six cyl with 5 speed manual trans.
'66 Piper Cherokee 360 CID , 180 hp, 155 mph @ 2500 rpm, drop in K&N filter.
Need For Steve wrote:thinking seriously about a trans temp guage for the lesabre, just to keep an eye on things with this kinda mileage (110K+).
Wouldn't it make more sense to just change the xmission oil and filter and not worry about the xmission at all? Or if you live in the hot spot of the nation, install an external xmission oil cooler.
bonnevillain wrote:I don't know about a '94, but obd-II vehicles already have a tranny temp sensor,
If it is not the coolant tmperature, then my '91 (Oh-bla-dee I)has a some sort of trans sensor that prevents it from going into "Hyper-drive" when it is cold.
2006 Salsa Vibe - Auto - Side Curtain Air Bags - ABS - Vehicle Stability Control - Tunes No Moon - Monotone - Preferred Package - Slate Cyper Cloth - Steelie Wheels
2002 Snap Orange Beetle - Auto - Turbo
1991 Dark Garnet Red Oldsmobile 88 - Donated to Science
JMH1950 wrote:There used to be a member here who would make up the cable for a reasonable price his user name was "slug" I believe.
I'm still alive and well and have parts to make more cables. At cost for club members for the Actron 9110 scanner. It's a "Buttermore/slug" work-around for the extinct Actron 9115 cable that fits into the Actron GM 9111 cartridge.