| Cycle | Fresh Fluid | ATF Used |
|---|
Drain-and-Fill vs Full Exchange
There are two ways to service automatic transmission fluid. A drain-and-fill empties the pan and refills it, replacing only the fluid that drains out, usually a third to a half of the total. A full exchange, done with a machine, pushes nearly all the old fluid out and replaces it. Knowing which you are doing tells you how much fluid to buy.
Why the Pan Holds Only Part of It
A large share of the fluid lives in the torque converter, the cooler, and the lines, none of which drain when you drop the pan. That is why a single drain-and-fill cannot fully refresh the fluid, and why the dirty fluid that remains mixes back in when you drive.
The Multiple Drain-and-Fill Method
Because each drain-and-fill dilutes the old fluid, doing several over a few hundred miles gradually approaches fresh fluid without a flush machine. The cycle table shows how the fresh percentage climbs with each service, so you can decide how many to do and how much fluid to budget.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is a flush safe on a high-mileage transmission?
On a neglected, high-mileage unit, many techs prefer gentle drain-and-fills over a high-pressure flush. Follow your manufacturer guidance and use the specified fluid.
What recovery percentage should I use?
Most pan drains recover 30 to 50 percent. If you know your transmission, use its figure; otherwise 40 percent is a reasonable default.
Do I need the exact fluid type?
Yes. Automatic transmissions are sensitive to fluid specification. Using the wrong ATF can cause shifting problems and damage.
