Okay.... here's "my version" of the "skinny" on the x-mission "flush"....
DON'T just DRAIN and FILL.... you are simply diluting the efficacy of the service... may as well not do it at all....
FULL FLUSH and FILL.... (the DIALYSIS method...)
Takes about 10 quarts. (liters)
Buy the proper TOYOTA SPECIFIED fluid yourself.... (talk to the shop you will use up front, and make the "arrangements" before you buy your own fluid, etc...)
They will connect an ATF FLUSH machine (dialysis machine... HA) to your tranny fluid circuit, and drain then RUN THROUGH several quarts to "RINSE" the old fluid and residual contaminants out of the valve body, clutch packs, coolant jackets, etc.... then when they have thoroughly flushed the system to "clear".... they'll disconnect the machine and make sure it is "topped off" to the proper level.
I paid the regular 4-5 bucks per quart for the fluid at Toyota, then had the job done RIGHT at my local oil change shop... and it cost me a little over $50 for the full flush. I did my change at about 32k HIGHWAY miles.... on a (THEN) stock '04 V6 Solara.... (I'll do it at 20-25k now that I am driving ALOT harder w/CP-e and other mods...)
RESULTS:
FANTASTIC! MUCH better shift action, quicker shifts, smoother shifts, firmer shifts, better shift response.
NOTE: MANY shops/manuals will tell you that you SHOULDN'T change tranny fluid unless you have performance deterioration, or BURNT fluid, etc.... (the: "If it ain't broken, don't fix it..." philosophy...) There are REASONS for this... namely, the way the clutch packs get "empregnated" with the tranny fluid and everything "seats in"... wherein sometimes, you can CHANGE the fluid and experience DETERIORATION of tranny performance... Personally, I don't know if this was more of an issue with OLDER cars and fiber clutch packs and fluids, etc... but my personal experience has been to CHANGE it at an interval suited for your driving, and to do so with a proper (THOROUGH) flush.
CAUTION: I would be VERY CAREFUL about having ANY kind of detergent or "cleaner" agent run through my tranny.... BEST to stick with the SAME SPECIFIED FLUID you will run in the tranny when it's full. Otherwise, you are just risking further contamination from either:
a) The "dis-similar" fluid that is left residually in the tranny.... or....
b) The "contaminants" that would otherwise NOT have been "introduced" (broken loose) into the fluid with a straight tranny fluid flush... (This is ESPECIALLY true with OLDER vehicles, that haven't had their service done REGULARLY.... If done REGULARLY, and in the manner described above.... I think you will enjoy a trouble-free tranny experience.... barring abuse, of course....)
Just my thoughts.... any comments? (I'm no expert here.... I just stayed at the HOLIDAY INN EXPRESS again....)
-crisp
