E4OD advice

phenopd

Observer
I had to have a e4od rebuilt. The guy who rebuilt it was something of a specialist with that trans. He would not warranty it without a new cooler, because of the chance of residue from the old trans screwing up the new one. Definitely a new cooler. After that no problems. Done right it’s a good trans.
 
Out of all the "performance" mods I did on my 2010 van, the one thing that made the biggest difference was removing the Ford emblem on the grill, then using a drimmel tool to cut out the center. It allowed a direct path for air to the tranny cooler. My average operating temp went from 185 down to 130-150, with 170 being the high while pulling passes in the mountains.
IMO Air flow to the tranny cooler is as important as the size of cooler.
 

Deshet

Adventurer
Out of all the "performance" mods I did on my 2010 van, the one thing that made the biggest difference was removing the Ford emblem on the grill, then using a drimmel tool to cut out the center. It allowed a direct path for air to the tranny cooler. My average operating temp went from 185 down to 130-150, with 170 being the high while pulling passes in the mountains.
IMO Air flow to the tranny cooler is as important as the size of cooler.

I would like to see pictures of what you are talking about. My grill may be different then yours but the transmission cooler doesn't seem restricted. The numbers that you posted are pretty good. Are you using a cooler built into the radiator or a stand alone?

Thanks
 

broncobowsher

Adventurer
No way would I ever delete the in radiator cooler.
If you are running good, A/C off, air to the fan cool enough that the clutch isn't locked in and take off from a stop you spike the trans temps. With pretty much zero airflow through the cooler it can't shed heat. Something like a boat ramp is about as evil as you can ask for. The in radiator cooler uses the thermal mass of the water to take that spike in heat. There is enough water to absorb that spike the engine will never care. But the trans will love the oil coming back only warm and not boiling.
 
On my 2010 5.4L, the tranny cooler is right behind the large Ford emblem.
I got the idea from watching a show on the new Chevy Camaro. They removed the front emblem for the La Mans race and increased the airflow by 50k cfm at 100mph.
Around town there's not any change. Notice it the most when pulling Eisenhower, Vail or Monarch passes.
IMG_0399.jpg

g3.jpg
 
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FDM2012

Adventurer
Awesome OBS!!!!!



Gas or diesel engine?

My transmission on my 1995 powerstroke took a dump at 100K miles. Still worked however poorly. This was in 1999. At that time I was told to take it to Brian's Truck Stop in Arkansas as he was "Da Man"!

Drove the truck to Arkansas and they rebuilt my transmission while I spent the day. Saw the whole process. Amazing how few new stock parts were used in the rebuild. Almost everything was upgraded. His warranty then was 3 years unlimited mileage. He didn't care what you pulled or did the warranty was 3 years. At the time 1999 he was building and installing a lot of Ford automatic transmissions in the Dodge Cummins trucks replacing the Dodge unit. Same warranty with a turned up Cummins equipped Dodge having MUCH more power than the Ford at that time . I spent $3500 on this tranny rebuild in 1999 and have never looked back!

105K miles later I still have the truck and don't drive the truck much anymore however all I have ever done is service the transmission as required by Bryan and used Shaeffer tranny fluid.

Now there are certainly many reputable transmission builders to choose from. Just had an automatic transmission built in my 01 Dodge Cummins by Bowman here locally in Nashville and it shifts and pulls great. Once again I paid for the needed upgrades to solve all the now known transmission issues with the Dodge.

All the problems with E4OD was well known along with the fixes. Spend the money to fix it properly with a reputable builder and you will never had to "Fix It" again!

http://www.brianstruckshop.com/
 

FDM2012

Adventurer
Ken, get a 26 row 6.0 trans cooler in that rig!! You are about to drop 2 thouty on it (or more), so now keep it cool!

It requires some moderate fab work, but nothing major...

IMG_20170610_214143.jpg
 

cjken

Explorer
Awesome.
You mean this???
I’ll look into it.
dd84a9ece9b89648e3629af9416e5588.jpg
 

DWitcher

New member
Do yourself a favor and get a low stall billet triple disc converter. Night and day difference how a low stall converter will put the power to the ground rather than feeling like a slipping clutch and going nowhere. Shift kit is a nice addition too.
 

derjack

Adventurer
On my 2010 5.4L, the tranny cooler is right behind the large Ford emblem.
I got the idea from watching a show on the new Chevy Camaro. They removed the front emblem for the La Mans race and increased the airflow by 50k cfm at 100mph.
Around town there's not any change. Notice it the most when pulling Eisenhower, Vail or Monarch passes.
View attachment 438435

View attachment 438436

Very good!

I cannot believe how stupid grills are done sometimes - just looks :Wow1: I´ve sooooo many people here installing a LED light Bar right in front of the radiator and/ or installing a nice, heavy peace of steel instead of a bumper in the front. Actually there is a reason for the hole in the original bumper:
E350_comic.jpg

Though the tranny cooler is smaller than the water radiator of course.

I would [and personally will for this summer, for mine E4OD/7.3 IDI] look into a temp gauge and a water sprayer in front of it, at a first step. And see how this goes. I don´t expect the temps to be permanently high. There is also a shroud lacking in my configuration from Ford by default! I cannot understand that! This will increase the airflow through the radiator. So better flow through the Water and tranny/ air con ones. Maybe build myself, this is nothing that needs to be nice looking ...

PS: Temps > everybody is talking about high temps - no one mentioned a number. What is too high?
 
Very good!

PS: Temps > everybody is talking about high temps - no one mentioned a number. What is too high?

This is just my opinion/experience going back to the 90's when Chevy put the same POS OD tranny in everything from the S10 4.3 to the 3500 with a 454....
200: you're working it hard
220: you're overheated
240: you're burning and blowing fluid

I personally like to see modern trannys between 150-175. With all the electronics in the transmission, the plastic can harden over time causing the valve body to fail if not kept on the cooler end. Too cool all the time and you may get condensation issues.
Other's who've ran Ford trans for longer than me could probably give a little better numbers based on their experience.

I got a Scan Gauge II that I have monitoring engine water tem and trans temp. In the summer on a warm day pulling the mountains, I'll run 200 motor temp and 170-175 on the trans temp. Coasting down the other side both drop 10 degrees.
(***Prior to me opening up the air flow to the factory trans cooler my temps would run 205/188 motor/trans.)
 
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