Jeriatric
Thinks out loud
When you select up/down on the shift paddle an electrical impulse is sent to a hydraulically actuated shift controller and hydraulic pressure shuttles a valve completing the shift request.
The SE 5 hydraulic system has a ' dedicated pressure pump ' that supplies oil pressure to shuttle the shift control valve. (this system has it own/dedicated oil filter too)
The oil pickup that supplies the pump is located ' at the bottom ' of the engine oil reservoir.
Which brings me to the point of this post.
A low oil reading. At or below the ADD mark on the oil reservoir dip stick will certainly lead to shifting problems when the spyder is in motion.
Think of it this way. If your oil level is at or below the ADD mark when the spyder is setting still on level ground. What do you think happens to that same oil level when the spyder is in motion? You got it. It swishes around.
When the oil level is low and swishing around the oil pump can/will be deprived of its oil supply. NOT GOOD.
The oil pump that supplies the shift controller, also supplies oil to the clutches. Therefore, failure to maintain a proper oil level will not only cause shifting problems, it could/will cause premature clutch failure.
Hope this helps those who are less mechanically inclined and probably wonder WHY all the fuss about maintaining proper oil levels in the SE 5.
Try keeping your oil at - at least - the halfway mark.
Purposely stayed away from using HCM & TCM for simplicity. KISS
The SE 5 hydraulic system has a ' dedicated pressure pump ' that supplies oil pressure to shuttle the shift control valve. (this system has it own/dedicated oil filter too)
The oil pickup that supplies the pump is located ' at the bottom ' of the engine oil reservoir.
Which brings me to the point of this post.
A low oil reading. At or below the ADD mark on the oil reservoir dip stick will certainly lead to shifting problems when the spyder is in motion.
Think of it this way. If your oil level is at or below the ADD mark when the spyder is setting still on level ground. What do you think happens to that same oil level when the spyder is in motion? You got it. It swishes around.
When the oil level is low and swishing around the oil pump can/will be deprived of its oil supply. NOT GOOD.
The oil pump that supplies the shift controller, also supplies oil to the clutches. Therefore, failure to maintain a proper oil level will not only cause shifting problems, it could/will cause premature clutch failure.
Hope this helps those who are less mechanically inclined and probably wonder WHY all the fuss about maintaining proper oil levels in the SE 5.
Try keeping your oil at - at least - the halfway mark.
Purposely stayed away from using HCM & TCM for simplicity. KISS
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