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The differential fluid on a Dodge Ram 1500 4x4 needs to be changed every 50,000 miles for normal highway driving. If the vehicle is used in 4x4 regularly, then change the differential fluid about every 25,000 to 30,000 miles.
To check or change the differential fluid in a 1989 Club Car golf car you will need to remove the oil cover. Unscrew the bolts and brass fitting.
There is no concrete answer. Different vehicles have different needs. For instance, an off-road vehicle may need a differential fluid change as often as every 30,000 miles. A vehicle used for everyday travel may never need a differential fluid change. Some manufactures consider the differential lubed for life and others recommend that it be changed at a set mileage like 100,000 miles. Refer to your owner's manual for when or if yours should be changed.
B1 means you need to change the oil/filter. The 6 refers to changing the rear differential fluid if it is a 4wd.
it would be cheaper to buy a 4x4 vehicle u need to change out the front end suspension , such as springs steering, axle.then u need to change transmission to one that accomadates a transfer case.then u need to change rear drive shaft to match, u also need to buy front drive shaft. after getting all this you then need to make sure rear differential and front differential both have same gear ratios
You dont, you just top it up to the screw hole if needed. If there isn't a drain plug, the cover will need removed to drain the fluid. You then reseal the cover and fill the fluid.
I need to know the same thing but for those who tag it as adding transmission fluid, you're wrong. The automatic has a separate differential with its own fluid.
If there is not a drain plug on the bottom of the differential then you will have to remove the rear cover. If that is the case you will need a cover gasket. If it is limited slip, then it will require a special additive. Also be sure of the weight and if it is synthetic or not.
A grinding noise heard from the rear of a Honda CR-V all-wheel drive model (look for the presence of a differential and axles to the rear wheels, also the "AWD" emblem or logo on the rear glass or tailgate) is typically the result of neglect in servicing the dual pump fluid in the rear differential. Failure to change the fluid causes friction in the differential as the fluid degrades it's ability to lubricate the clutch plates. The noise occurs on sharp turns as that is when the differential works the hardest coping with inside/outside wheel speed differences. Change the fluid using the Honda Dual Pump fluid, test drive and change again as needed until the noise is gone or you need a diff. unit (very rare). All Honda dealers carry this fluid and are familiar with this issue.
I would change it. A lot of people neglect on changing gear oil. Most manufacturers recommend changing it, mileage varies, check your owners manual.
You may need differential fluid...check that.
you need to pull your rear pumpkin(diff cover) and let the fluid drain out. When its done draining you need put your cover back on and either get a new seal or just use some silicone. unscrew the plug and fill it with diff fluid