Been thinking for a while that I really should change out the fluids in the differential and transmission on the blue C5Z so I ordered the fluids and had them sitting in the cabinet for a little while. I was thinking about the condition of the engine oil when I drained it after getting it back from South Georgia Corvette, and I guess it's probably foolish for me to trust even these initial fluids were done correctly, all things considered.
So I decided that today was the day. Put the car up on the lift and started in on it.
I started with the differential so first thing to do was to drain the old fluid, here's a pic of where the drain plug is located:
And then once that was drained, put the drain plug back in, torqued it to about 25 ft/lbs, and moved on to locating the filler plug and removing that:
In order to remove both those plugs, you will need a 10mm allen wrench, or to make things easier, use an H10 socket with a ratchet.
My differential took just slightly over 2 quarts before it started running out of the filler hole.
BTW, you are going to need one of these things to do the differential and transmission:
Unless you can flip the car upside down, or you want to completely remove those units from the car, it's the only way to get fluid INTO the filler holes.
Put the filler plug back in, and on to the transmission. This would have been a LOT easier without all that turbo plumbing in back of the differential. And just a note, that filler plug on the differential was REALLY in there tight. Not sure why that would be, as the drain plug came out very easily.
BTW, I put sealant on all the plugs. Probably a good idea to keep the fluids from seeping around the plugs eventually.
So I decided that today was the day. Put the car up on the lift and started in on it.
I started with the differential so first thing to do was to drain the old fluid, here's a pic of where the drain plug is located:
And then once that was drained, put the drain plug back in, torqued it to about 25 ft/lbs, and moved on to locating the filler plug and removing that:
In order to remove both those plugs, you will need a 10mm allen wrench, or to make things easier, use an H10 socket with a ratchet.
My differential took just slightly over 2 quarts before it started running out of the filler hole.
BTW, you are going to need one of these things to do the differential and transmission:
Unless you can flip the car upside down, or you want to completely remove those units from the car, it's the only way to get fluid INTO the filler holes.
Put the filler plug back in, and on to the transmission. This would have been a LOT easier without all that turbo plumbing in back of the differential. And just a note, that filler plug on the differential was REALLY in there tight. Not sure why that would be, as the drain plug came out very easily.
BTW, I put sealant on all the plugs. Probably a good idea to keep the fluids from seeping around the plugs eventually.