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ZF external cooler install and transmission service - How to


El Andrew

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Having just serviced my ZF transmission and installed an air-to-oil transmission cooler with a fan, the following is a write up of how I approached it.Some of information out there was very scattered or hard to find, so I thought a full write up might help anyone else doing this.

This should bring together the whole job of adding a cooler to replace the factory heat exchanger, adding a fan with a thermostatic switch to activate (plus a manual override), flushing the ZF, changing the filter and pan gasket and replacing the mechatronic sleeve.

This was a first for me, so if there are things I could have done differently, feel free to point them out so someone else can avoid a mistake or save some time!

While it is a reasonable size job, I don’t feel like anything was especially difficult.If you are confident with general servicing and basic wiring, you shouldn’t have any problems!Of course though it is your transmission which is expensive if you stuff it up!

I pre-prepared as much of the wiring as I could so that it was already to go when I installed the cooler.You can of course not worry about the fan, as some people do, which significantly reduces this job.In my view, there is not heaps of airflow inside the bumper and while you are stationery, your airflow is zero.I figure if you are going to the effort, you may as well go the whole box and dice.I’ve noticed that the temps stabilise nicely once the fan kicks in, so I think your box will definitely run cooler with a fan installed which should help longevity.

My car is a 2010 FG XR6 Turbo, but the principles will be the same for many other cars:

-N/A you could mount in front of the air-con condenser and would have less need for a fan due to better airflow

-BA/non-ZF BF with a BTR transmission – similar deal, but you are removing existing lines from the radiator, not the ZF’s heat exchanger.

A big thank you to those of you who gave me advice and responses to various questions along the way!Also to a couple of BMW videos on YouTube that helped me out with the mechatronic sleeve.

 

Parts list

The following is the list of parts I used:

Cooler – DC698 Davies Craig transmission cooler and fan kit (you can also get a slightly bigger cooler than this which would also fit but may be harder to fit the fan to).

A length of aluminium bar (2x20mm.About 600mm will be plenty) to make cooler mounting brackets.

3/8” hose – 2x 2m lengths will do it.Some comes in the kit, but not enough.

Hose clamps – I used EFI ones that don’t cut into the hose as much.4x clamps if you are not fitting a temp switch on the fan, 6x clamps if you are (some will come in the kit if you are using one, but I bought better ones).

1x relay (included in above kit if you go that route)

1x inline fuse (I got the mini blade type so that it was the same type as the car’s fuse box)

1x Narva add-a-circuit to add ignition power (needs to be micro-blade type to suit Falcon fusebox) – saves hacking into the factory wiring

Some electrical wire

Crimp-on spade connectors

Stainless bolts, nylock buts and washers and a couple of self-tappers for attaching the cooler to the brackets you will make up.

Raceworks ZF transmission adaptor (pack of 2) (RWF-922-ZF-08BK)– Aeroflow, Speedflow, Proflow all do these as well.(You need the ones for the ZF transmission, not the Ford 6R variant – outside diameter of the ZF fitting is 16.4mm)

Aeroflow -8 AN to 3/8” barb right angle adaptors (x2) (AF413-08-06BLK) – again lots of equivalents in various brands

ZF steel pan with drain plug (you can of course re-use your existing steel pan.I think the plastic pans are single use as the filter is integral)

ZF pan gasket

ZF filter

ZF mechatronic sleeve

20L drum of Gulf Western Syn-TS (formerly SynTrans)

If you want to have a thermo switch to kick the fan in:

Derale thermostatic switch (13021) (gets plumbed inline to one of your new transmission lines, includes 3/8 barb adaptors)

LED light (optional, but I like knowing when the fan has been triggered)

Switch with an LED indicator if you want a manual override on the fan

Scrivets for refitting bumper and shrouds afterwards

Special tools

Assuming you have all of the basic sockets, pliers, etc. the following will make your life easier:

Decent wire crimpers and strippers

Hose cutting pliers (these are cheap and do a much better job than stuffing around with pliers or a knife)

A pump for filling the transmission – the type that fits a 20L drum works perfectly.

OBD2 Bluetooth tool and Torque app to read transmission temperature when getting the level right.

 

Part one – physical cooler and fan installation

I installed the cooler in the space in front of the driver’s side front wheel, behind the horns.

Place the car on ramps or stands (don’t tip it off and destroy your bumper like I did – goodbye savings from doing this job myself, but hello pristine new bar with no existing scuffs)

Remove the front bar – lots of info out there on how to do this.But briefly:

-Remove tray from underneath front bumper

-Remove scrivets from intake, radiator cover, etc. and remove intake snorkel and grille

-Remove scrivets inside both front wheel arches that connect to the bumper so that you can access bumper bolts (you can leave the lower wind defector section of the guard liner in place and these will just stay with the front bar when you remove it

Remove two bolts (10mm) holding bumper in place behind grille

Remove 2x bolts (10mm) each side at top corner of bumper (behind guard liners)

Carefully pull each corner outwards from the bumper mounts and then pull bumper forward and remove from car.Have a sheet or something ready to carefully place it on, unless like me you had already murdered the bar and are fitting a new one.

Assemble your cooler/fan assembly depending on the kit/instructions you have.I also attached the relay to the fan at this point

You need to make up brackets to mount the cooler securely, but still have some flex.You don’t want to crack a cooler!I used the bolt under the bumper mounting bracket as my main bracket, and a right angle bracket to the chassis to stabilise it as per the picture.

I made my main bracket by:

-Drill some holes in the aluminium bar to suit the mounting holes on your cooler.

-Use a vice and a shifter to put a 90 degree twist in the bar

-Bolt the cooler/fan assembly to the aluminium bar

-Measure the length the bar needs to be by holding it (with cooler attached) up next to the car, then cut the bar with an angle grinder or hack saw.Round off the top corner to make it sit nicely under the bumper mount and give you some rotation for adjustment.Make sure you allow for the cooler to clear the bumper when installed.

 

Pics of main bracket:

PQEYuTn.jpg

pOSrDma.jpg

I made my secondary bracket by:

-Bolting the cooler in place using the main bracket

-Measuring the approx. size I needed for the secondary bracket

-Cut and bend aluminium bar to suit.

-Drill a hole in each end of the bracket

-Bolt the bracket to the cooler, position the whole setup how you want it and use a centre punch to mark the chassis

-Unbolt the main bracket and remove the whole assembly and then drill a hole (where you centre-punched) to suit your self-tapping screw

-Re-install and add your self-tapping screw.

Pics of secondary bracket:

TpIZf3N.jpg

zsG5Sqc.jpg

 

Note I had to fiddle around with the orientation of the horns a bit as they were hitting the fan shroud.

Now is a good time to test fit your bumper and make any adjustments to your brackets if needed

This is the whole mounting setup off the car:

9TDp4zn.jpg

And installed in the car:

2YzhaKr.jpg

Now route your new cooler lines:

-Connect to your cooler, remembering to thread a hose clamp on to each hose first, then tighten down securely

-I routed my hoses along the front K-frame cross-member (just cable-tied to the wiring loom running there – I will go back later and install p-clamps properly) making sure you are clear of the accessories belt and pulleys.

dTaATA8.jpg

If between the cooler and the K-frame your line is rubbing on any panels, protect by cutting open a small piece of hose and sticking/gluing to the panel to prevent gradual damage to your line that might cause an eventual leak, or using a grommet in the same way I have:

owBaKHa.jpg

UG95zJ8.jpg

(I’m planning to go back and check this later to make sure it all stayed in place OK)

-Then go along the chassis rail under the inlet manifold towards the transmission

-Cut one hose near your transmission and add in your thermo switch with hose clamps, then a new piece of hose long enough to reach the cooler ports on the transmission

Thermo switch plumbed in (with wiring which I’ll cover next):

ZPcDfW7.jpg

-The other hose can just continue to the same location, but doesn’t need anything mounted inline.

 

Secure the hose up out of the way and tape the hose ends if you aren’t finishing the job here – your car is still driveable but you have done the hard bit!

Part two – wiring

I won’t go into full detail here, as everyone likes to do this differently.But basically what I did was:

Used the add-a-circuit in the fuse box to add a new circuit off an existing circuit that powers on with accessories.From there I split into two circuits:

-One wire headed off to a switch (if your switch has an indicator light you can ground back to the grounding point behind the fuse box) to be used for the manual override.I mounted my switch in the little pop-out panel in the steering column that is used for the adjustable pedals option.From the switch, head the wire through the firewall.

-One wire headed to an LED (I mounted mine with my aftermarket gauges) and then on through the firewall.This wire will be for the thermo switch and the LED will tell you when the thermos switch has kicked in.

My wiring was a bit more complex than that, as I did it as part of a larger boost, wideband and oil pressure gauge install.I pinned up a Deutsch connector just inside the firewall to take all of this wiring neatly through the firewall.

The rubber grommet behind the carpet in the passenger footwell is a great place to take the wiring through.It is away from the exhaust and conveniently pops out near your transmission.Just cut or drill a small hole in the rubber plug to feed your wiring through.A touch of Innox spray or similar will help feed the wires through (especially if you are feeding a rubber hose through for a boost gauge).

Run your thermo switch wire to the thermo switch (you will eventually plumb this into your transmission line) and then from the thermo switch it can be soldered or crimped to your wire coming from your manual switch.You now have two switches (manual and thermos) wired in parallel and can run a single wire through to your fan location (just run the wire along the transmission lines you have added).Crimp on a spade connector and connect to the trigger terminal on your relay (or your kit may have a relay connector that you need to join to).

Here’s my relay mounted on the cooler:

KxEiSCx.jpg

Run power and ground from your battery to your relay (include an inline fuse on the power), ground from battery to your fan (can share with the relay’s ground) and power from your relay to your fan.

At this point, it is not a bad idea to get out a multimeter or test light and confirm everything is working eg your LED, your manual switch, etc.

I’ll draw up a basic wiring diagram of all this and add soon.

Part 3 – hooking up the cooler and de-commissioning the old heat exchanger

The existing cooler lines are held in place on the transmission by a bracket with a 10mm bolt.Remove this and the lines just pull straight out of the transmission.Have a drain pan ready for whatever spills out.Congratulations, you are now officially milkshake-proof!

On the heat exchanger end of the lines, the fittings are push lock.You need to push them further on to the ports on the heat exchanger, squeeze the tabs on the side in, and pull off.A set of multi-grips does this nicely.If you get stuck there is nothing wrong with being rough or cutting them – it is all going in the bin anyway.

First line removed from heat exchanger:

tE5kIes.jpg

You can just leave the coolant lines as is, attached to the heat exchanger, if you don’t want to lose a bunch of coolant right now.Come back later with a 1/2" male-to-male barbed fitting to connect the two coolant hoses together.I left my heat exchanger coolant lines in place as my coolant is brand new – next time I have a need to open up the cooling system I’ll sort this out and have the fitting ready to go.

There are three bolts holding the heat exchanger to the engine block (you can see the lower one in the pic above).If you have disconnected your coolant lines, remove the bolts and remove the heat exchanger.DON’T sell it on Gumtree – put it in the bin where it belongs!

If you are leaving you coolant lines intact for now, still remove these bolts so you can tip the heat exchanger and drain the transmission fluid out of the bottom of the heat exchanger.You don’t want this coming out the ports and painting the underneath of your car every time you turn right for the next couple of weeks.Once you have tipped out as much fluid as you can, replace the bolts.

Now connect your transmission to the new lines you ran earlier.

-Assemble each ZF adaptor to the -8 to barbed right angle adaptor (tighten with two spanners to ensure no leaks)

-Thread a clamp onto each line

-Fit the hose to each barbed fitting and tighten the clamps

-Push each line into the transmission ports.The lower port it the outlet from the transmission, so this should be the line with the thermos switch installed.

-Re-fit the bracket and 10mm bolt you removed when uninstalling the factory lines

New fittings and lines installed into box, with bracket re-attached:

AMYT8Ei.jpg

-Do any tidy up of lines with cable ties or P-clamps to keep everything tidy and safe from getting hit or caught under the car

Part 4 – service the transmission- flush, filter, mechatronic sleeve, gasket

Now that you have a new cooler with new lines, you are going to need to at least top up your fluid due to the longer lines and increased cooler capacity.Makes sense to do a full service then and replace all of the consumable stuff at once.Your box will last longer if you do this – I think the only reason you wouldn’t do this is if you had a very recent flush on your transmission)

I went with:

-New fluid – 20L drum so I could do a full flush

-New filter, of course

-New steel pan with a drain plug and new gasket – not essential (as I already had a steel pan) but well worth it - not just for this job but if you are planning to service the trans periodically.Once you remove the existing pan once you will understand why.

-New mechatronic sleeve – the o-rings on these are prone to leaking and you need to remove the pan to replace the sleeve, so do it now.

 

First step is to remove the fill plug on the driver’s side of the transmission, towards the back.Mine was a T50 although it sounds like some might be 8mm internal hex (Allen).Mine was ridiculously tight (ended up with a steel pipe over the handle of a breaker bar sticking out the front of the car) so make sure you can loosen this before you go dumping your transmission oil.

Prepare the area by putting down a tarp and some cardboard and even have a couple of old towels on hand.It can get messy!

Remove the bolts from the pan and lower the pan, tipping the fluid into a drain pan.I removed a bunch of bolts and left the corners in place, then gradually undid these and then removed the front ones so I could tip as much fluid out the front as possible.Even so, there will still be quite a bit in there when you remove the last of the bolts.

(Note I think the plastic pans have an integrated filter, so you might need a whole new pan assembly anyway – I haven’t done this on any other cars so I don’t know for sure.)

Once the pan is out of the way you will see the filter on the bottom of the transmission.Pull this out too.You might find the seal on the filter gets left behind – remove this from the transmission too using a small screwdriver or a pick, being careful not to scratch the metal surface.

The orange seal left behind that needs removing:

gMoqiFf.jpg

Use a blade to scrape any left over gasket off the bottom of the transmission.

Now for the mechatronic sleeve:

-The wiring connector is at the back of the transmission on the driver’s side.Push the locking tab up to release the wiring connector and pull it out of the way.

Connector removed:

y8hMstF.jpg

-The sleeve the connector fitted into is what you are replacing.This is locked into place by the white locking mechanism INSIDE the transmission.I found this out on a YouTube video for a BMW ZF installation – if you didn’t know about the lock and just forced the sleeve, you could end up having a very bad day.

Locking tab to pull downwards:

PYwYcAQ.jpg

-As you have already removed the pan, pull this lock downwards to release the sleeve

-The sleeve slides out – it doesn’t unscrew.Grab it with multi-grips if it is stubborn and gently wriggle backwards.

-Lubricate the o-rings on your new sleeve with Innox spray or a bit of fresh trans fluid to make the sleeve easier to fit.

-Push the sleeve into place by hand as far as it will go.You can see that there is a cut-out on the sleeve which dictates the orientation – this points downward.

-Close the locking mechanism by pushing upwards.You may need to apply some pressure to the sleeve (pushing it towards the front of the vehicle) while simultaneously closing the lock.You can do this with a pry bar with a big flat blade, or use a breaker bar against a small block of wood (slide the bar in above the trans cross-member).

Applying pry bar to sleeve:

bnyzsoS.jpg

-Refit the wiring connector and pull the locking tab back down.Again, tabs and cut-outs mean the connector can only go in a certain way.Be gentle so you don’t wreck anything.

You can now install the new filter, gasket and pan (NOTE – I did a new gasket and filter here and then new again for the final fill.You could just re-use the old stuff here and then go new for the final fill.)

-Push the filter into place – push firmly so that it goes all the way home

New filter installed:

jiIrBA9.jpg

-Place the gasket over the pan, lift the pan into position and add bolts to each corner by hand.

-Add all remaining bolts by hand, making sure each bolt goes through the gasket and the gasket remains neatly in place without being folder or wrinkled.

-For tightening, you want to make sure you don’t warp the pan as it may leak.I think there is a recommended order, but if you alternate side to side and work your way from the middle to the ends, and just tighten a bit at a time before repeating the process, you should be fine.

-The bolts need to be tight enough to prevent leaking but certainly not over-tightened.Stripping the threads in your transmission would also be a bad day.

You are now ready to fill your transmission and start flushing.

-Double check that your drain plug is in place, your pan is securely fitted and your new transmission lines well-secured.

-Remove the fill plug on the side which you loosened at the start of this part.Use a pump, and fill until fluid start to run out of the fill hole.(I didn’t worry about ensuring the car was completely level front-to-back at this point – you are only flushing at this stage.)

-Loosely replace the fill plug

-Start the engine, lift the revs to about 1200 RPM for a few seconds, then switch off.This should pump oil through your transmission and fill up your new cooler and lines.

-Remove the fill plug and top up your transmission to the fill hole again – it may take quite a bit.Replace the fill plug.

-Start the engine and with your foot on the brake, place the car into reverse, neutral, drive, etc. pausing for a few seconds in each.Do this cycle a couple of times.

-In a perfect world (I.e. one with a hoist) you’d run the car up to speed and let the convertor lock, etc.Safety first though and I’m not doing that on axle stands thanks very much. Personally I don’t think it is a major problem to be near enough is good enough here.

-Undo your drain and fill plugs, draining the fluid.Due to the amount of fluid held in the convertor, it will now be around a 50/50 mix of old and new fluid.

-Repeat the fill, start, cycle through the gears, drain process another couple of times until the fluid you are draining looks like nice, fresh fluid – this indicates you have gotten rid of the vast majority of the old stuff.

-I actually stopped here after two refills due to time and drove the car for a week before doing the third and then final dump and fill.This certainly meant all of the fluid in the convertor etc was mixed through!

You can now undertake the final fill, which needs to be a bit more specific:

-Ensure the transmission is level.I used a spirit level on the pan to confirm.My front wheels were on ramps, so I just jacked under the K-frame a touch to bring the trans to level – extending the suspension slightly while still having the wheels on the ramps (I have a bit of a slope on the driveway)

-You need to check the level with the transmission at or very close to 35 degrees C.A heat gun or using the Torque app with a OBDII tool will do this.My Max Ellery manual says ‘transmission case should feel warm to the touch but not fully warmed up’ – pretty approximate but might do if you have no other option!

(In the Torque app go to Settings, Manage custom PIDs, menu, Add a Predefined set, Ford.This will add a group of Ford-specific PIDs.You can now add a display using the [FORD] Transmission Fluid Temp option.There are several there, but when adding a display pick [FORD] Transmission Fluid Temp Method 2 for current temp in Celsius.)

-With the car running and the fluid at 35 degrees, let the engine run and pump fluid in until fluid dribbles out the fill hole.Re-fit the fill plug.

At this point you are done – clean around the drain, fill hole, etc., check everything for leaks and tighten as necessary.Refit your bumper, etc.Lower to the ground and go for a test drive.Go and get an actual chocolate milkshake rather than one made in your overflow bottle.

After a week or so, get under the car again and check your connections for leaks.

My final setup looks like this:

feKVePm.jpg

2YzhaKr.jpg

From underneath to give you an idea of fitment inside bar:

DrWBmjw.jpg

Edited by k31th
fixed pics
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Thanks guys. And thanks Keith - looks like you fixed a few links! Noticed a while afterwards that some of the IMG tags dropped off when I pasted.

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Great write up, any one had issues with the fluid spraying out of the filler hole when running after fitting a new cooler ?
I topped up the level with engine turned off ran it up through the gears for a bit with plug in but tried to check level with engine at idle and around 35' but it sprayed out and I ended up putting plug back in

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Ok, so DON'T do what I did with the horns! I swivelled them to clear the fan shroud and had since thought I'd left one unplugged due to the horn sounding strange.

 

Removed the front bar last night to check and the horns were full of water! Which seems obvious to me now.

 

Instead you could bend the horn bracket a bit to tilt the horns forward.

 

I installed a set of new disc style horns that clear fine. Colour coded to the car too - not that you can see them!

@wayno1 not sure re your issue but someone else might. Could be frothing up if it is over-filled? Did you do anything else like filter change etc? There is no need to replace the plug when you start up and run through the gears.816c088d238800621bccd285068a65da.jpg

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