Gerry64
New Member
Hi All , has anyone done a fair bit of towing a van without upgrading gearbox cooling , worried about voiding warranty
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Were going to buy a 18ft caravan , and worried the standard gearbox cooling will not cool it enough
EDIT: adsm08 is a Ford Technician. So, I would go by his recommendations.
The other issue with an add-on cooler on the 10R series of transmissions is that there are no cooler lines. The heat exchanger is bolted right to the side of the trans and the ports that handle the trans fluid are plugged directly into the case. It would be quite a bit of work to plumb one in.
Also (and another thing I had to use the Google for), Albion Park is in New South Wales Australia, which has contributed to some of our confusion.
Now, not having worked on an Aussie Ranger, and not having access to that version of the shop manuals, I don't know for sure that anything I've said is correct, but given Ford's recent push to streamline things by globalizing designs as much as possible, it's a good bet the US and Aussie Rangers for 2020 aren't that different.
Ok, see, I still had to go and Google that.
You want to tow a pull-behind camper/RV unit like this:
What I thought you asked was about towing this:
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I don't have any direct experience towing with the newer Rangers, but I do have some experience working on them and the transmission system.
The transmission coolers for the 10R transmissions aren't like the old radiator style units. It's a pretty beefy and dense block under the truck with engine coolant running through it to keep the transmission fluid at a constant temp. It is going to be a lot more efficient than the old school ones.
As long as you have the tow package and the trailer isn't more than the truck's rated towing capacity you shouldn't have any issues. You aren't going to be able to easily put a mechanical trans temp gauge on that truck, but it might not be a bad idea to buy a scan gauge of some sort to monitor the transmission temp.
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Haha, I was thinking the same thing when the OP said towing a van.
Aren't many of today's automatic transmission equipped with some sort of transmission cooler thermostat/bypass system? So when the vehicle is cold the transmission fluid bypasses the cooler and circulates within the transmission until the thermostat opens to allow the fluid to go through the external/auxiliary cooler? Is this something similar to how the 10R transmissions and probably others work as well? If I recall my 08 Toyota Tundra did this as well, which helped warm the transmission up to temperature quicker and maintain a more steady temperature instead of what could be large temperature swings in cold weather and hot weather.