Dwgray
Active Member
Howdy. Has anyone tried the installation of a true transmission cooler on their 2019-2023 Ranger?
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My stock 2022 Ranger has a heat exchanger versus a separate dedicated external cooler. We live in Phoenix. Whether stop or go traffic or freeway traffic, when it's consistently above 110 everything runs hot. The old adage for transmission fluid is longer life for your transmission with cooler transmission fluid.
All vehicles have been that way since automatics came out. You can add a aux cooler but it's always recommended by the aux cooler manufacturers to hook the added cooler in series with the factory heat exchanger.My stock 2022 Ranger has a heat exchanger versus a separate dedicated external cooler. We live in Phoenix. Whether stop or go traffic or freeway traffic, when it's consistently above 110 everything runs hot. The old adage for transmission fluid is longer life for your transmission with cooler transmission fluid.
I like the PPE pan option and plan to install it. Thank you for the feedback.To make sure what franklin says it Chrystal clear, the auxiliary cooler gets installed before the factory cooler. That way, if the auxiliary cooler cools the fluid too much, the factory system will heat it back up.
From my research, as long as the transmission coolant is kept below 300 degrees, all should be good. I can keep an eye on that through my ScanGauge II since the sensors already in the OBD II system to read from. So, far mine has been good, even while towing. Granted, the trailer I pull is no where near the maximum rating of the truck but it is an added stress.
I replaced the factory transmission pan with a PPE aluminum pan with a drain plug recently. So I'm anticipating that the fluid temperature may drop some due to better heat transfer compared to the plastic factory pan.
No, that's not how it should be. It should go from the transmission, to the radiator cooler then to the axillary cooler. That is how they are from the factory if they come with one and that is how an aftermarket one should be hooked up. Transmission fluid should be kept below 250 degress, I don't like to see anything above 230, 300 is cooking it.To make sure what franklin says it Chrystal clear, the auxiliary cooler gets installed before the factory cooler. That way, if the auxiliary cooler cools the fluid too much, the factory system will heat it back up.
From my research, as long as the transmission coolant is kept below 300 degrees, all should be good. I can keep an eye on that through my ScanGauge II since the sensors already in the OBD II system to read from. So, far mine has been good, even while towing. Granted, the trailer I pull is no where near the maximum rating of the truck but it is an added stress.
I replaced the factory transmission pan with a PPE aluminum pan with a drain plug recently. So I'm anticipating that the fluid temperature may drop some due to better heat transfer compared to the plastic factory pan.
No, that's not how it should be. It should go from the transmission, to the radiator cooler then to the axillary cooler. That is how they are from the factory if they come with one and that is how an aftermarket one should be hooked up. Transmission fluid should be kept below 250 degress, I don't like to see anything above 230, 300 is cooking it.
I like the PPE pan option and plan to install it. Thank you for the feedback.
I have installed dozens of aftermarket coolers and have never had that problem on any vehicle, plumbing it in after the radiator is how I have seen all the factory coolers done and it is also how all the aftermarket cooler companys reccomend you install it.For vehicles that do monitor the transmission temperature and do not come with an auxiliary cooler, running the auxiliary cooler after the cooler in the radiator can cause problems. Transmission fluid that is too cool will force the engine into warm up mode or keep it there, throwing off fuel trims, emissions, and can cause the engine to run poorly. It was a thing we saw a lot in the HondaSUV forum and that I read about other places with other vehicles. Running the auxiliary cooler before the radiator cooler prevents that.