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Went to change the transmission fluid in my new/used truck and look at what is not a Cracker Jack prize at the bottom of the pan. I realize this is a really bad indication that my tranny is about to fail, and that nobody has a crystal ball, but am asking the question if I continue to drive it (as there is no obvious problems currently) till the it fails, am I compounding my soon to be $2000 repair bill? I am told it is a "center snap ring" and failure is inevitable, this is coming from the guy that quoted the repair so I get that he wants the business but asking the question here is free! FYI.. I don't tow with it, drive 30 miles a day in light city traffic and will have my 86 road ready in a week.
Well the good news is that the plastic piece in the pan is normal (just a plug used during assembly that they push into pan when installing the dipstick/filler tube) - so that's one less piece you need to worry about.
Get a price and warranty from the local guy.
When I worked for city - we bought remanufactured transmissions from Jasper (they will have a shop in about every major city). They were good quality rebuilds and have a 3-year 100,000 mile warranty. Remanufactured Transmissions | The Jasper Process
Your AOD is not much for performance - maybe you don't need it beefed up. But if you were to pay the $2000 you mentioned (which is twice what a Jasper tranny will cost you) you could get a "built" transmission from Broader Transmission AOD - Broader Performance
I found if you do the R&R and they do the rebuilding it is a lot cheaper.
I would try and get your other ride working asap then get this fixed when you want.
I don't think I would drive it more than I had to because if more gets broken inside or the case it's self could run more $$ than he gave you.
Just my .02
Dave ----
Looks like a snap ring. The plastic piece or normal, dipstick plug the just push into the pan when installing the dipstick. I would plan to pull and rebuild soon. Get your other vehicle working and then do this. $2000 is insane, a rebuild kit is $200-$400 and it ain't rocket surgery.
Based upon rowdyredneck's diagram posting, and knowing my limitations, me, myself and I am not up to the challenge of a repair/rebuild. If your in Wisconsin next week, I'll supply the pizza and beer..........
Part # 883 looks correct, the other 2/3rd's is hanging on my what I don't know, so I'm gonna get on getting my other truck running ASAP. I can tackle these decisions without the pressures of how I am going to get to work, thanks for the info.
Talk about differences of opinion, "2000 is cheap" verses for that money I could get a "built" unit. I know my mechanical abilities, so there is something to be said about letting the guys that do this for a living take care of this. It would be about a 5 to 7 hundred dollar savings, which is clearly a lot of money but making a mistake could be just as costly. Gonna do some more research, thanks for your input.
I found if you do the R&R and they do the rebuilding it is a lot cheaper.
I asked about this at my local tranny shop. It would only save me $100 and they would not warranty the trans. I asked why and they said there was no guarantee that I would get the radiator cooler clean enough, and any dirt in there would ruin the rebuilt trans. They had special cleaner stuff and a certain method they used to clean it out.
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