So I changed my diff and transfer case fluids around 30K miles. At that time, the Transfer fluid looked a little bit dark, but overall in pretty good shape, the front diff, was pretty dirty and the rear diff was practically black. I just did it again at about 81k miles (all 3). The Transfer fluid looked like the day I put it in and the diffs both appeared to be in really good shape too. I'm sure that this is primarily due to the standard wear during the first X (10k?) miles on a new car, but I was pretty surprised at both 1) how dirty it was the first time and 2) how clean it was the second time.
I am not in any way an Amsoil fanboy, but I used Amsoil 80w-90 (the exact spec called for in the manual) gear oil for the diffs and Amsoil Universal ATF (with the Matic D/J spec) for the Transfer case at both the 30k and now the 81k service.
Just thought I'd post my results.
Just remember the transfer case uses ATF, not diff oil. When I changed mine, I noticed that the fluid was in much better condition than the front and rear diffs even though I changed the transfer case fluid 14K or so later than the differentials. And the magnetic plug didn't have nearly as much stuff on it. I suppose it makes since as the transfer case doesn't do as much work as the differentials since AWD turns off above 19mph.
I just did this and the oil was black with were lots of metal shavings in the rear diff. The front was dark brown, not too much metal in the plug, but it looked like it was under-filled. Interestingly, the front diff only took 1 bottle of fluid.
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I just did this and the oil was black with were lots of metal shavings in the rear diff. The front was dark brown, not too much metal in the plug, but it looked like it was under-filled. Interestingly, the front diff only took 1 bottle of fluid.
Sent from my iPhone