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gearbox oil
- Thread starter Guest
- Start date
Diver944
Active member
Remember to remove the filler plug first before draining the oil [
Paragon
This is the most comprehensive info I have found thus far. My gearbox is a right little horror until it is well warmed up, and if the state of the belt rollers is indicative of the maintenance skills of the previous owner I expect the oil is going to be in some state... There is another article here....
Paragon again
if you want to give yourself a migrane unravelling the mysteries of gearbox oil
Alpine
Member
ORIGINAL: Mikie_gb
I have just ordered Swepco 201 from Bert Gear At Berlyn Services and it should arrive tomorrow. Not sure on Grade etc, as I asked him to advise. There is an aticle here...
Paragon
This is the most comprehensive info I have found thus far. My gearbox is a right little horror until it is well warmed up, and if the state of the belt rollers is indicative of the maintenance skills of the previous owner I expect the oil is going to be in some state... There is another article here....
Paragon again
if you want to give yourself a migrane unravelling the mysteries of gearbox oil
Mikie
I assume you have installed Swepco. How do you find it? I am going to change my g'box oil and wondered whether to go for swepco or just synthetic gear oil.
Alpine
Member
ORIGINAL: kalahari
I had a standard 944 lux for a while before this one, so I realise the 1 -2 change is not one of the best eatures of the range.
is there meant to be a general problem with 1st to 2nd on the 944?
Diver944
Active member
Jon Mitchell www.9xx.co.uk sells an uprated gear linkage which is said to improve things
Guest
New member
Ask the oilman at Opie Oils ring.
http://www.opieoils.co.uk/lubricants.htm
01209 215164
Speak to Simon or Guy.
I've recently replaced engine oil and gearbox/trans/rear diff oil on my 1988 928 S4 manual with Silkolene fully synthetic oils. Ring them and you'll get an informed chat and if you order it'll be a good price with delivery the next day.
Good luck - P.S. the oils are fantastic and don't do the old "Oh dear! Don't synthetics blow up your car?" - bit. That's the rubbish people like to perpetuate. It aint so.
Rich
Guest
New member
ORIGINAL: martincammack
- P.S. the oils are fantastic and don't do the old "Oh dear! Don't synthetics blow up your car?" - bit. That's the rubbish people like to perpetuate. It aint so.
Rich
Actually, it does have some basis for old motors. Deposits of crud build up on the seals with dino oil. Then you introduce synthetics which have better cleaning abilities, they clean out the deposits which were sealing oil leaks and you start to drip. And switching back to dyno oil won't help as the deposits are gone. So you need to replace the old seals which is a fair amount of work.
How often this actually happens is probably exaggerated but we are driving old cars and if it happens to anyone we are high on the target list.
I've been running synthetic since the car ('88 951S) was 2 years old so have never had the problem, but some friends that switched late in the game have.
I'd stick synthetic in the gear box without hesitation. The 15+ year old motor would be a totally different question if it has never run synthetic. You know how long it takes to get to the rear main crank seal? I've been there and done that on the clutch job and would kick myself in the butt for a week straight if I had to go back in there for just the seal.
My two cents.
Guest
New member
I'll be honest and say I think this paranoia about synthetic is exactly that and more to the point, I believe that in some perverse way people like repeating it and all other things they hear people say - a bit like a religious chant that indicates to others and themselves that they are part of the clan and know the rituals that membership brings.
Again just MHO.
random hero
New member

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