Originally Posted By: MolaKule
The Aisin case is another one of those in which the engineers did not consult with the tribologist or lubrication engineer during the design or testing phase. This happens more than you might imagine and then when field failures start coming in, they scramble to dump somethiong in there until they figure out what they screwed up.
As an engineer, I can assure you engineers don't always talk to each other when they should...
But making a change that requires going back to an almost-out-of-production fluid seems even more ridiculous, because anyone designing synchros should have been aware that GL-3 was outdated and wouldn't be produced in large volumes much longer.
The Aisin case is another one of those in which the engineers did not consult with the tribologist or lubrication engineer during the design or testing phase. This happens more than you might imagine and then when field failures start coming in, they scramble to dump somethiong in there until they figure out what they screwed up.
As an engineer, I can assure you engineers don't always talk to each other when they should...

But making a change that requires going back to an almost-out-of-production fluid seems even more ridiculous, because anyone designing synchros should have been aware that GL-3 was outdated and wouldn't be produced in large volumes much longer.