My 96 Saturn had a leaking transmission top cover gasket, so I decided to fix it. After five years of cardboard, it was getting annoying.
Fine, I download a DIY guide from SaturnFans. The procedure was fairly simple:
1. Remove air box and resonator
2. Remove intake tubing
3. Remove battery and battery tray.
4. Wiggle Master Cylinder out of the way, and strap with bungee cords.
5. Remove bolts on top cover, replace gasket, and reinstall.
6. Reinstall everything in reverse.
It took me about 45 min to do 1-5, except for removing the gasket. Did have to use some special flex sockets to get the bolts off, but no biggie.
Pull the cover off, and see the gasket. I thought fine, I skin it off, pop the new one on, and I'm golden.
How wrong was I...!!! The gasket was GLUED onto the top of the transmission with gasket sealer (?). If you've ever been under the hood of a 96 Saturn SL2, the area the transmission opening is is about 1' by 1', surrounded by an AC line, radiator hose, and master cylinder.
Four putty knives, two cans of carb cleaner, two long screwdrivers, and a can of gasket softener, plus almost 2 hours later, I had 95% of the gasket scraped off. Had some fall in the transmission too.
To give you an idea of how "tough" this stuff was stuck on, even after repeated attempts with gasket softener, the traces of gasket on the cover itself required a motorized wire brush to "machine off."
So uhh...does anyone have any tips on how to deal with this now? I think a small amount of gasket material may've fallen into the transmission, but I do have a spin-on filter on there. Any advice in the future for tough gasket removal jobs like this?
TIA.
Fine, I download a DIY guide from SaturnFans. The procedure was fairly simple:
1. Remove air box and resonator
2. Remove intake tubing
3. Remove battery and battery tray.
4. Wiggle Master Cylinder out of the way, and strap with bungee cords.
5. Remove bolts on top cover, replace gasket, and reinstall.
6. Reinstall everything in reverse.
It took me about 45 min to do 1-5, except for removing the gasket. Did have to use some special flex sockets to get the bolts off, but no biggie.
Pull the cover off, and see the gasket. I thought fine, I skin it off, pop the new one on, and I'm golden.
How wrong was I...!!! The gasket was GLUED onto the top of the transmission with gasket sealer (?). If you've ever been under the hood of a 96 Saturn SL2, the area the transmission opening is is about 1' by 1', surrounded by an AC line, radiator hose, and master cylinder.
Four putty knives, two cans of carb cleaner, two long screwdrivers, and a can of gasket softener, plus almost 2 hours later, I had 95% of the gasket scraped off. Had some fall in the transmission too.
To give you an idea of how "tough" this stuff was stuck on, even after repeated attempts with gasket softener, the traces of gasket on the cover itself required a motorized wire brush to "machine off."
So uhh...does anyone have any tips on how to deal with this now? I think a small amount of gasket material may've fallen into the transmission, but I do have a spin-on filter on there. Any advice in the future for tough gasket removal jobs like this?
TIA.