Michiel 2005's photos with the keyword: automatic transmission

Vacuum modulator and pressure line attached to tes…

10 May 2014 871
Automatic transmission 722.112 under a 1980 Mercedes-Benz 280CE.

Testing the working pressure

10 May 2014 285
Automatic transmission 722.112 under a 1980 Mercedes-Benz 280CE.

722.112 automatic transmission

10 May 2014 648
Automatic transmission 722.112 under a 1980 Mercedes-Benz 280CE.

Mercedes-Benz Tauschaggregat

25 May 2010 336
Replacement transmission on a Mercedes-Benz 300TDT.

Checking the oil pressure inside a Mercedes-Benz 7…

21 Apr 2012 234
Modulation pressure to be precise. Should be 2.9 bar at 50 km/h with no vacuum on the modulator.

Checking the oil pressure inside a Mercedes-Benz 7…

21 Apr 2012 263
Modulation pressure to be precise. Should be 2.9 bar at 50 km/h with no vacuum on the modulator.

Vacuum modulator on a Mercedes-Benz 722.303 transm…

No number of the automatic transmission above the…

25 May 2010 275
The Tauschaggregat has the number on the little plate, original transmissions have the number above the oil pan.

Checking the vacuum with a T-joint and a vacuum me…

09 Aug 2009 252
Officially you should check the vacuum control valves by turning the engine off and check with the residual vacuum. You can also put in a T joint and connect a vacuum meter. Then you can check while the car is running or during driving.

Checking the vacuum with a T-joint and a vacuum me…

09 Aug 2009 279
Officially you should check the vacuum control valves by turning the engine off and check with the residual vacuum. You can also put in a T joint and connect a vacuum meter. Then you can check while the car is running or during driving.

Switchover vacuum valve of a Mercedes-Benz 300 D

09 Aug 2009 252
The vacuum is needed to control the automatic transmission. On this particular model the vacuum controls both the shift points and the quality of the shift (hard or soft). When you don't press the accelerator, full vacuum (-0.75 bar) from the pump is fed to the transmission. When you press the accelerator the switchover valve connects the transmission to the output of the vacuum control valve on the diesel pump. The vacuum goes to -0.4 bar, the transmission shifts from 2nd to 1st gear. If you press the accelerator further, vacuum goes to 0 bar at full throttle. Less vacuum means later and harder shifts. Of course all these vacuum parts can fail after 30 years and then the shifts become hard and/or erratic.