Any experience with an E40D transmission? Pump seal behind converter

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AuroraGirl

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I know, i know. "Go forder" but its my towing rig. puking trans fluid out. any experience?
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Bextreme04

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If it was me and it was my towing rig that I needed to run well and reliably, I would drop it out and rebuild it. A quality rebuild kit and the manual is only about $200. This company is local to me but also ships and has a really good reputation. https://www.oregonperformancetransmission.com/product/OPT-E4OD-4R100-RB.html

You can probably find a kit cheaper elsewhere and if you don't have a lot of miles on it you can probably just flush it really well, clean everything up, and replace the seals. I had 240,000 miles on mine when I sold it and it had never had anything rebuilt on it. Still ran like a champ and had no issues. It was in a 2001 F150 4x4 with the heavy duty tow package.
 

1985c20

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Incredibly common with the obs fords. The stock seal is cheap and deforms under heat. Had a buddy in high school with a long bed 2wd we all thought it was a burnout machine but every time he loaded up on the converter to try it would just start puking fluid out the front seal haha. They sell a replacement made of Viton that is supposed to be much better.
 

AuroraGirl

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118k miles and it's not heavily used. Fluid is nice and red. I may have been driving 90 miles an hour sustained and gunned from stops before it started leaking.

But what I'm asking, anyone knows the steps or how hard? I've never pulled a trans before. Idk much
 

Bextreme04

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If you have the facilities to work on it and a transmission jack, it is pretty simple and easy. I would assume just replacing the pump seal would be pretty easy. You probably dont even need to fully remove the trans, just push it back enough to get the torque converter off, swap the seal, plop the converter back in and bolt it all back together. If it was me and I was taking the time to remove the transmission, I would just spend the money for a stock rebuild kit and rebuild the trans while its out. If you aren't comfortable with doing that kind of thing, then don't touch anything that doesn't HAVE to be touched and just fix the one problem.
 

AuroraGirl

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If you have the facilities to work on it and a transmission jack, it is pretty simple and easy. I would assume just replacing the pump seal would be pretty easy. You probably dont even need to fully remove the trans, just push it back enough to get the torque converter off, swap the seal, plop the converter back in and bolt it all back together. If it was me and I was taking the time to remove the transmission, I would just spend the money for a stock rebuild kit and rebuild the trans while its out. If you aren't comfortable with doing that kind of thing, then don't touch anything that doesn't HAVE to be touched and just fix the one problem.
How hard is removing a torque converter and is It right behind it. I'm having troubles finding videos
 

Bextreme04

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here's a relevant video.
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. At about the 4 minute mark he talks about removing the torque converter bolts. It bolts to the flex plate and is slid into the input on the transmission. Once you unbold the transmission and slide it back, the torque converter would just slide out of the front of the transmission.
 

1987 GMC Jimmy

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The only thing I can say is the truck here at the house has burned its E4OD thrice in 225K miles from excessive payloads. When you rebuild it, or even if you don’t, a neatly installed secondary cooler would be a smart move.
 

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