ATF special enough? HYVO isnt new. Came out in the 60s and used in many automatic transmissions such as GM th 425, 4t80, th 125 and th 440t4 to name a few. Lets include 4x4 transfer case too. The only only time I seen hyvo chain go stiff in a tcase or snowmobile chain case is when it was run out of fluid. The hydraulic system in an at trans wouldnt allow it to go long enough to smoke the chain.HYVO chains take special oil or they stiffen up,
So when the auto manufactors called for a high velocity chain for transmission and tcase cases chain speed is somehow inherently snail speed? I dont think so. Food for thought. Typical snowmobile chaincase it Under driven close to 2 to 1. A gm th 425 is 1 to 1 with 65 tooth sprockets. A gm th 440t4 is Overdriven with 37 and 33 tooth sprockets. Automatic transmission chain input rpm is a constant engine rpm, snowmobile chaincase has input ratio from Under driven 3 - 1 to 1 - 1 and with some od. Can figure chain velocity with a bit of math such as rate x diameter x pie or something like that. The diameter of a 22 tooth snowmobile upper sprocket vs say an at transmission input 37 or 65 tooth sprocket my calculations say the at trans chain velocity is haulin azz. 4x4 tcases have large diameter sprockets and will see .60-.70 od yet too.Same here. Snowmobile chain case drive systems spin at higher rpm than automotive gear boxes.
The qt of cvt fluid in the pic cost me nothing (extra from a transmission job) that save me 20$ over a qt of SCL from the dealer which is just gear lube anyway. Open qt of any oil on my shelf goes in my chain cases when I do service. Its not rocket science.How often are you changing it that it's worth saving $2 to not use regular chaincase oil?
I ran 3 different repair shops for 51 years saw many Hyvo chain get stiff, you could hold them straight out and they just stood out like a stick, these were chains the customers used oils different than what was recommended and yes the oil was still in the chaincase when I opened the chain case(s) up for service.ATF special enough? HYVO isnt new. Came out in the 60s and used in many automatic transmissions such as GM th 425, 4t80, th 125 and th 440t4 to name a few. Lets include 4x4 transfer case too. The only only time I seen hyvo chain go stiff in a tcase or snowmobile chain case is when it was run out of fluid. The hydraulic system in an at trans wouldnt allow it to go long enough to smoke the chain.
So when the auto manufactors called for a high velocity chain for transmission and tcase cases chain speed is somehow inherently snail speed? I dont think so. Food for thought. Typical snowmobile chaincase it Under driven close to 2 to 1. A gm th 425 is 1 to 1 with 65 tooth sprockets. A gm th 440t4 is Overdriven with 37 and 33 tooth sprockets. Automatic transmission chain input rpm is a constant engine rpm, snowmobile chaincase has input ratio from Under driven 3 - 1 to 1 - 1 and with some od. Can figure chain velocity with a bit of math such as rate x diameter x pie or something like that. The diameter of a 22 tooth snowmobile upper sprocket vs say an at transmission input 37 or 65 tooth sprocket my calculations say the at trans chain velocity is haulin azz. 4x4 tcases have large diameter sprockets and will see .60-.70 od yet too.
The qt of cvt fluid in the pic cost me nothing (extra from a transmission job) that save me 20$ over a qt of SCL from the dealer which is just gear lube anyway. Open qt of any oil on my shelf goes in my chain cases when I do service. Its not rocket science.