Originally Posted By: Sylvatica
Honda has certainly proven that they are the masters of producing transmissions which consistently defy the general rule that maintenance will extend service life.
The Odyssey/Pilot 4-speed and 5-speed transmissions are so bad that one recall covered over 1,200,000 units, the next recall 600,000. That means bad design and bad engineering, even if the assemblers in Ohio did everything "right". That means UNTESTED by the manufacturer. That means they sent those trans units to production and into the garages of consumers without doing their jobs. They turned the buyer into the beta test.
My friend went through FOUR transmissions on his 2001 Odyssey. The oil jet bandaid recall did nothing to extend the life of the first "fix" and he has been plagued with gear failures and lock-ups, one happening to his wife, with baby in car, in middle of bad intersection. They bought their van, btw, with the gushing endorsement of Consumer Reports, who still shows no transmission problems for these vehicles in their ratings.
If the cluctch systems actually last long enough on these Honda trans, then they will just suffer gear failure. No uber-lubricant can forestall it, even if you changed it daily. Under-design, under-specification and light construction equals failure in a transmission. A prudent level of over-design (or at least a sufficiently specified level of engineering) combined with proper maintenance, can make for a 100,000+ mi transmission service life. And there are big Allison automatics in heavy construction equipment that can take stresses that you can't even imagine. But when you glue a weak transmission to a car/van/SUV platform, prepare for disaster.
Honda does make a fine engine, no question about it. But if your Honda trans is holding up, you are fortunate.
I HAD an Acura TL with the substandard trans., it failed and was replaced at ~90k.
I agree with most of what you say here but your Consumer Reports comment is just plain wrong. The trans. has a big solid black circle (worst rating) on the reliability chart and the one paragraph model summary says "Transmission problems were evident during 1998 to 2003 model years."