Amsoil CVT in Toyota

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Mar 22, 2021
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12
Hi Guys,

Has anyone here run Amsoil CVT oil in their Toyota transmission?
Any feedback good or bad before I do a pan drop and filter change.
 
Hi Guys,

Has anyone here run Amsoil CVT oil in their Toyota transmission?
Any feedback good or bad before I do a pan drop and filter change.
Are you dealing with a hybrid with an eCVT? If it is a hybrid, DO NOT use CVT fluid.

If you have a non-hybrid Corolla with the CVT, you should be fine to use the AMSOIL CVT fluid.
 
It’s a 2017 Corolla non hybrid.
Can’t find many people that have actually used anything other than Toyota CVT FE oil.

The Amsoil specs differ slightly and seem a little closer to the Toyota CVT TC oil, which I believe is interchangeable as they went to the FE which is thinner due to emissions / MPG reasons?
 
Just use Toyota CVT fluid. It's readily available and no guess work involved.
Thanks but the point is that I want feedback on anyone using a higher quality lubricant.
Would rather save wear on my transmission than try save the planet
 
I wouldn't strictly narrow it down to Amsoil CVT.

There is: Redline, Valvoline, Castrol, and others, too.
 
It’s a 2017 Corolla non hybrid.
Can’t find many people that have actually used anything other than Toyota CVT FE oil.

The Amsoil specs differ slightly and seem a little closer to the Toyota CVT TC oil, which I believe is interchangeable as they went to the FE which is thinner due to emissions / MPG reasons?
Use the Amsoil CVT fluid with confidence. Multiple customers are happy with this choice.

Amsoil CVT

https://www.amsoil.com/lookup/auto-...-cyl-engine-code-u-2zr-fe-u/?volume=us-volume
 
Not sure it helps you but I’ve run it in amsoil in a Honda and Subaru cvt, worked with no issues but not cheaper than Valvoline which I use now. as a member stated above you can’t go wrong with oem in a cvt. I believe the Toyota cvt in non hybrids actually has a gear for starting out then uses the belt/pulley at higher speeds, not sure if this makes a difference in fluid choice though.
 
Thanks but the point is that I want feedback on anyone using a higher quality lubricant.
Would rather save wear on my transmission than try save the planet
I had a non-dealer use non-Subaru CVT fluid in a Subaru CVT about a year and 15k ago. Nothing bad happening yet. I did use Toyota in my Toyota mostly because it was still in warranty (so got the dealer drain and fill).

Point: as long as it meets specs I wouldn't worry about using a name brand aftermarket fluid. But that's just my opinion.
 
Just use Toyota CVT fluid. It's readily available and no guess work involved.
I always like these posts... I would never use any other cvt oil in my Honda then OEM Honda oil...Same for any other make...I would rather be safe then sorry...IMO
 
I always like these posts... I would never use any other cvt oil in my Honda then OEM Honda oil...Same for any other make...I would rather be safe then sorry...IMO

I use this same logic for using higher quality lubricants in my vehicle. If I can pay a little more and get a higher quality product, I will do so every time. I do my own work, so I save all the labor costs.
 
I am coming up soon on CVT change in our CRV. Last time it got hcf-2. I’ll gladly consider amsoil this go-round.

hey @Pablo, have they made noise about making a true ULV ATF?
 
It’s a 2017 Corolla non hybrid.
Can’t find many people that have actually used anything other than Toyota CVT FE oil.

The Amsoil specs differ slightly and seem a little closer to the Toyota CVT TC oil, which I believe is interchangeable as they went to the FE which is thinner due to emissions / MPG reasons?

Since it's not a hybrid, you can use standard CVT fluid. Napa has Valvoline CVT fluid on sale for $8.99/qt through the end of the year. They also carry Idemitsu TLS-FE, but it's $14.99/qt (20% off if you spend at least $125 on eligible items).

Mag 1 CVT is often a good price, too. Rock Auto has it $6/qt plus shipping.

Castrol CVT used to be a great price on Amazon, but I think they stopped making it in favor of their new universal ATF/CVT combo fluid, which may scare some people. The Castrol ATF/CVT, and the new Maxlife that is also an ATF/CVT combo now, are probably OK to use in your CVT, but I'd still rather use a dedicated CVT fluid in it.
 
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