1989 Honda Accord LX-i
B18c1 swap since 7/2011
175whp and 132tq
Redzone tuned
yea the semisynthetic oils don't have enough friction to make the syncros work properly, thats one of the things that confuses people, they need a specific amount of friction to work. Thats why the syncromesh works, it's a friction modified oil. when these transmissions were built, the only thing even close to synthetic oil , were some very expensive motorcycle racing oils. It's the same reason you need special motorcycle oil for bikes with wet clutches. without that oil with the friction modifiers they won't work right.
Ok, for now, I just put 10W-30 in it. When I go to replace my oil filter base gasket, I'll drain the trans when I drain the engine (might as well do an oil change while I'm under there), and add Honda MTF to the trans, along with a quality oil for the engine. Any suggestions on oil for an engine with 389,XXX miles?
1986 Accord LXi 3-door
1968 Chevy C20
Only use Honda MTF, no engine oil.
I can't read the signature rules so MrBen deleted my signature.
I get it......Honda MTF > engine oil......BUT, 10W-30 is whats suggested in the Honda Service Manual for these cars, so thats what I used. Considering its my only running vehicle, couldn't exactly wait til the dealership opened on Monday, having to be to work at 8:00 and all.
Next time, I know what to use.
1986 Accord LXi 3-door
1968 Chevy C20
On this subject has anyone seen the acura transmissions with the oil jet added? it's an auto, but i wonder how that would work on the manuals with a stand alone electric oil pump? you could add a jet to the 5th gear cover and use an rpm switch or some kind of sensor so it knows when the car is in fifth? you would modify an oil drain plug for a fitting and run an oil line from it to the pump. the reason Honda retrofitted the acura transmissions, is the 2nd gear shaft would overheat and fail. it could add a lot of cooling to the fifth gear area
main problem I would see would be how to keep the pump from draining the bottom of the case dry. Reservoir maybe? Pump flow rate? Whats the lowest/highest the fluid level can get while the vehicle is running? If I had the time/money I'd definitely be up for trying this out.
1986 Accord LXi 3-door
1968 Chevy C20
if you install an oil jet,thats going to limit the volume of oil flowing through it, the oil is simply going to flow back down to the bottom of the pan, if you install a pickup in a drain plug, there's always going to be oil, as it's the lowest point. you would remove the fifth gear cover, and weld on a fitting for the jet, what it would do is spray oil on the gears.
Dr_Snooz
"I like to take hammers, and just break stuff, just break stuff." - Beavis
1989 Honda Accord LX-i Coupe, 240k miles, MT swap, rear disc swap
Shop manual downloads available here: CLICK TO VIEW
GM Syncromesh FM is the nicest trans oil for hondas ive found hands down, Buttery smooth shifts. Honda MTF is also very good, and I can def feel a difference from MTF vs motor oil, and MTF vs Syncromesh fluid. I would most def stay away from any synthetic motor oil as a trans fill, it doesnt climb gears well and its too slick for the syncros, as they work on friction. The syncromesh is semi synthetic but with the friction modifier in it, it works very well. Lucas is too heavy/thick and tends to foam, so i wouldnt use it in anything I cared about, and ive heard mixed results from other manual trans oils like trick shift and shockproof redline, they might be OK depending on who you talk to. Ive personally put over 100000 miles in the acura TL with the syncromesh fluid and about 30000 miles on the accord with syncromesh fluid, with no long term effects. The only issue with syncromesh ive found is that after 30-40k miles per fill, it gets thinner viscosity wise, and benefits from being changed.
429whp 362wtq A20 TURBO. A20T>*
What are you guys using to get the tranny check bolt out? I tried to take mine out and broke a socket....?
89 Accord DX manual trans
Last edited by pink_sleeve; 10-03-2010 at 09:16 PM.
Where is the speed sensor located and what tools are required to remove it?
i think the speedo sensor is only a single 10mm bolt that holds the speedo sensor in. Its located by the rear trans mount back above the diff near the axles. You should be able to get it from the top, just take the bolt out, wiggle-pull it out and stick a big funnel right in there.
429whp 362wtq A20 TURBO. A20T>*
Ok i think i am looking at it. It appears to have 2 cables or fluid lines possibly? and wires coming out of the top and is pretty much right behing the starter on the tranny correct?
just put a box end wrench on the fill plug, a good one not a cheapo one, and hit the end of the wrench with a hammer, it will come loose
Your socket was probably cracked already. The speedo sensor is a good idea, but how do you know when you've added enough?
Dr_Snooz
"I like to take hammers, and just break stuff, just break stuff." - Beavis
1989 Honda Accord LX-i Coupe, 240k miles, MT swap, rear disc swap
Shop manual downloads available here: CLICK TO VIEW
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