4L60E No reverse - Wear gloves to handle this post

Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.

Joined
Mar 9, 2023
Posts
831
Reaction score
1,940
Location
The transmission bench
Hi @NickTransmissions, what an amazing answer, thank you very much for your time.

I also thought the same about the converter but I saw it open and it was fine, anyway I'm installing a reman. converter. All my suspicions are on the valve body and the EPC. In the new valve body I included all the Sonnax products I could find, especially the abuse valves famous for constant cross leaks.

The seals in the L/R piston were fine when removed, anyway I replaced this piston (fearing a metal crack that I couldn't see with the naked eye) and added new seals and springs.

So to recap I'm adding:

- Reman T. converter
- Full set of hard parts (without end play)
- Sonnax Smart Shell
- New steels and frictions + plates (stock)
- Reman VB
- New solenoids
- Tested pump with new valves from Sonnax
- New sprags
- New bushings (inc. sun gear wide bushing)
- Pressure switch manifold
- Release springs
- Pistons
- Case saver (1 million times easier to install than the famous anti-clunk spring)
- Seals and bearings
- Band

The only thing I didn't change is the input drum, but I cleaned it well and air tested the one I have. 3-4 clearance was set to 0.030 +/-.

I'm on my way to flush the lines and put the transmission back in the Tahoe.

Greetings from Colombia and Thanks for your help! :beer:
Nice, man. Sounds like you got it under control. I love the Sonnax smart shell, huge upgrade over stock and Sonnax parts wherever possible in all my builds. Their oversized AFL valve kit is also great for 4L60 and 4L80 VBs.

Lastly, did you pressure test the forward drum to check for leaks where the shaft is pressed into the drum? I see these leak bad about 20% of the time, mostly on 93-2000 units but occasionally ‘01+

ETA: Here’s what im referring to: Checking Fwd drum for leaks

Set your front end play to between .015-.025 (spec is .015-.035 but i feel it’s too loose beyond .025).

Glad to see folks getting into these things and rebuilding them!
 
Last edited:
OP
OP
davidavidd

davidavidd

Member
Joined
Oct 29, 2020
Posts
55
Reaction score
73
Location
CO
Nice, man. Sounds like you got it under control. I love the Sonnax smart shell, huge upgrade over stock and Sonnax parts wherever possible in all my builds. Their oversized AFL valve kit is also great for 4L60 and 4L80 VBs.

Lastly, did you pressure test the forward drum to check for leaks where the shaft is pressed into the drum? I see these leak bad about 20% of the time, mostly on 93-2000 units but occasionally ‘01+

Set your front end play to between .015-.025 (spec is .015-.035 but i feel it’s too loose beyond .025).

Glad to see folks getting into these things and rebuilding them!

Yes, everything is taking shape again, the smart shell looks solid let's see how it behaves.

I tested the input drum with air, no leaks. I saw a video of someone suggesting trying it hot but the idea of heating it in oil doesn't seem safe to me.

Working on these transmission is relaxing and fun for me (I always work in front of a computer so some movement and exercise is not bad), the only bad thing is putting it back in the truck, here in Colombia I don't have a lift :doh2:

In any case, it is my only option because nobody here in my city repairs these things, almost all the cars in Colombia (new and old ones) use manual gearboxes and the few shops that repair automatic transmissions charge around $4,000+ for a vehicle like mine (with that amount of money I can go to Miami, buy a transmission there, have a cocktail and return).

Finally, I am one of those who thinks that nobody does things with the level of attention and care that the owner...
 

Forum statistics

Threads
129,103
Posts
1,810,353
Members
92,177
Latest member
buckner0121

Latest posts

Top