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Gear oil, transfer case oil intervals?

Discussion in 'General Tacoma Talk' started by Gfenza89, Dec 22, 2023.

  1. Dec 22, 2023 at 4:48 PM
    #1
    Gfenza89

    Gfenza89 [OP] Well-Known Member

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    Brand new 2023 Tacoma sr5 v6 4x4. Did my break in oil change at 1k miles with amsoil signature series, but wondering at what interval mileage are you guys replacing your diff oil, transfer case and trans fluid? Just curious for future reference. Plan on having this Tacoma for very long time. Thank you

    IMG_1474.jpg
    IMG_1475.jpg
     
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  2. Dec 22, 2023 at 4:54 PM
    #2
    Squirt

    Squirt Samsung Aficionado!

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    Think the manual says 30k miles. Make sure to have the replacement crush washers on hand. Some don't replace them but they're cheap and you're already underneath so you might as well put on new ones.

    When you do change it TAKE THE FILL OFF BEFORE THE DRAIN! If you take off the drain and the fill won't come off you're gonna have a bad time!

    Super simple change. Fill it till it comes out then torque the plugs to spec :thumbsup:
     
    Last edited: Dec 22, 2023
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  3. Dec 22, 2023 at 4:57 PM
    #3
    Gfenza89

    Gfenza89 [OP] Well-Known Member

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    Thanks dude!
     
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  4. Dec 22, 2023 at 5:05 PM
    #4
    Clearwater Bill

    Clearwater Bill Never answer an anonymous letter

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    A few OE parts from fancy trucks
    Adding to what @Squirt pointed out......

    If it's a easy driven highway princess, the owners manual is fine to follow.

    If you work it off road regularly, tow or hoon on road, cutting the intervals in half is reasonable.

    If you beat it like a rented mule off road, fording streams, towing heavy, the switch to a synthetic product and still having the intervals in half is a nice treat for the truck.

    Side bar. All modern lubricant's are very good. Far, far superior to lubricants of just a couple decades ago. There's no reason to spend extra $ on boutique lubricants. Just use the correct weight and GL rating and all will be well.
     
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  5. Dec 22, 2023 at 5:14 PM
    #5
    TacoTuesday1

    TacoTuesday1 Well-Known Member

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    what I do is get a cheaper truck then I buy cheap fluids and change them

    the most often probably 30k

    depends if there’s suspicion or not
    Like hard use, water crossings, etc

    doesn’t hurt to do.
     
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  6. Dec 22, 2023 at 5:15 PM
    #6
    Sharpish

    Sharpish Well-Known Member

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    I personally would change the case and diffs out at 10 000 miles to get the break in oil out and put in an exotic high performance synthetic and forget about it for 100 000 miles. If you are driving through water often just get the cheap diff oil and change it out every 10 000. Just my opinion.
     
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  7. Dec 22, 2023 at 5:16 PM
    #7
    TacoTuesday1

    TacoTuesday1 Well-Known Member

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    gear companies share publicly charts on gear oil diff break in procedure.
     
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  8. Dec 22, 2023 at 5:22 PM
    #8
    Gfenza89

    Gfenza89 [OP] Well-Known Member

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    Thanks fellas
     
  9. Dec 22, 2023 at 5:51 PM
    #9
    TruckGuy63

    TruckGuy63 Well-Known Member

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    15 K is a good time frame . The gear oil in the diffs will be dark and pretty dirty. I’m at 30 k on second round , I did amsoil severe gear both times . Much cleaner this time . Transfer case I did on this round ,and I used the Toyota transfer case oil. It want very dirty at all. Everything is fresh now, and honestly very quiet . I have grease fittings on the front shaft that I keep greased
     
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  10. Dec 22, 2023 at 5:52 PM
    #10
    Gfenza89

    Gfenza89 [OP] Well-Known Member

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    Why Toyota oil in the transfer case and not amsoil?
     
  11. Dec 22, 2023 at 5:55 PM
    #11
    kairo

    kairo >_>

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    As a general rule, OEM is always the correct fluid for your vehicle. Toyota designs, tests, builds, and certifies the truck to work with their recommended fluids. No reason to go otherwise. I know for a fact that I'm not smarter than a bunch of Japanese engineers, so I do what they specify.

    Also, Amsoil is an MLM like Herbalife, Doterra, Tupperware, Amway, etc.
     
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  12. Dec 22, 2023 at 6:55 PM
    #12
    kairo

    kairo >_>

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    While you drive a Toyota lol

    And in 1972 we were strong allies with Japan. I'm not quite sure what you're getting at?

    API is an interest group. It's like me saying my tap water is the first household tap water officially recognized by the American Water Institute of kairo. Special interest groups are just lobbying, money, and politics. There's no officially mandated standards for any manufacturer set by the API (to the best of my knowledge). They're big enough that a lot of companies adopt their standards, but they're by no means a regulatory agency.
     
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  13. Dec 22, 2023 at 7:01 PM
    #13
    kairo

    kairo >_>

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    upload_2023-12-22_19-0-36.png


    Joined 7 years, almost to the day, and the first message is promoting Amsoil lol
     
  14. Dec 22, 2023 at 7:06 PM
    #14
    SWPA Tacoma

    SWPA Tacoma Well-Known Member

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    This thread has potential. Happy Friday!
     
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  15. Dec 22, 2023 at 7:20 PM
    #15
    uhchxrlie

    uhchxrlie Well-Known Member

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    In terms of when to change the fluids, I refer to this. Good diagram that is easy to follow.
    https://www.tacomaworld.com/threads/3rd-gen-maintenance-maps-get-300k-miles.789809/
     
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  16. Dec 22, 2023 at 7:45 PM
    #16
    TruckGuy63

    TruckGuy63 Well-Known Member

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    Because the transfer case has brass in it and the Toyota gear oil is specifically for that so the brass does not corrode over time . The only other brand you could or should use for the transfer case is Ravenol
    The oil in the front and rear diff is standard stuff . I just like amsoil gear oil . I ran it in my frontier for 255 k miles and it is good stuff .
     
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  17. Dec 23, 2023 at 3:10 AM
    #17
    Gfenza89

    Gfenza89 [OP] Well-Known Member

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    It looks like Toyota only sells gear oil and transfer case oil in quart cans. Not a very user friendly can to pour the oil into the transfer case or diffs.
     
  18. Dec 23, 2023 at 3:13 AM
    #18
    kairo

    kairo >_>

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    OEM fluids come in OEM packaging. It's generally assumed that you'll own the $1.25 funnel when you're doing maintenance.
     
  19. Dec 23, 2023 at 3:15 AM
    #19
    Gfenza89

    Gfenza89 [OP] Well-Known Member

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    A hand held pump would work better for that
     
  20. Dec 23, 2023 at 3:23 AM
    #20
    TruckGuy63

    TruckGuy63 Well-Known Member

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    Correct it not very user friendly unfortunately. I have a manual pump and just poured it into a plastic oil bottle ( clean of course ) and then pumped it in. And for what it’s worth I’m not promoting Amsoil . Mobil and plenty of other companies make gear oil . I just like using synthetic in the front and rear diff .
     
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