Yesterday morning I told you all about Thursday's stupidly short test drive--all 50 feet of it. I got home from work Friday afternoon with enough time to test my theory on the clunking noise. I put only the rear end on jack stands, then started the car. It only took a second to crawl underneath and verify that, yes, the noise was the driveshaft's front u-joint hitting the stock brace. I shut down the engine and, four bolts later, the brace was off the car. I started it back up and--voila!--no more driveshaft clunking. You know what that meant: time for a
real test drive.
For multiple reasons, I didn't want to go crazy. I took one slow lap around the neighborhood. I only got up to about 20 MPH, just enough for the trans to shift into second gear. I was barely applying throttle, which was probably a good thing because I could feel the transmission slipping... so I came around and pulled back into the driveway. I left the engine running, popped the hood, and removed the trans dipstick.
"Umm, how much fluid do you need to add if the dipstick is completely dry?"
I went looking through my garage for some Dexron-III (I
swear I had some left over) but I couldn't find any. I decided it might not be wise to drive the GP any significant distance with the fluid so low, so I shut it down and hopped in the Suburban for an O'Reilly's run. Back home, after adding three quarts it seemed to finally show up on the dipstick.... though it is difficult to be sure when there is fluid on the inner wall of the fill tube. Would this be enough to stop the slipping? There's only one way to find out.
Another lap around the neighborhood and the trans now seems much more responsive. Decided I wanted to get a little more aggressive on the throttle, so I went over to a more major road (which has extremely wide shoulders and little traffic, but is still limited to 25 MPH
) and dipped into it oh so slightly. Revving up to 3500 in first gear, this trans shifts
very firmly--much more so than the Suburban. I didn't dare hit 35 MPH since this road is a favorite hangout for speed patrol, and I didn't try any sort of tire spinning antics for the same reason. Still, so far things feel pretty fantastic.
When I'm in neutral or park, the engine idles around 1050 rpm. If I'm in gear and I'm holding the car still with the brake, the engine drops way down to 500-550 rpm. It
sounds like it is dying, but I think it's actually the car's way of saying it doesn't like sitting still. It would probably sounds pretty wicked if it weren't for the damn exhaust leak at the cylinder head.
The next three things I must do to the car are:
- fix that exhaust leak so I don't asphyxiate myself
- install taller front springs & new shocks
- replace the leaking trans pan gasket (and install a new filter while I'm at it)
My plan is to complete all three tasks this week. To that end, I ordered my new front coil springs & shocks today. While I was at it, I also ordered a LubeLocker gasket for the 4L80E trans pan. Should be fun.