Hydraulic oil is very thin and will leak if it gets a chance. It does not burn out but after several hundred hours it may start to disappear Your transmission oil might leak into the engine or the rear end due to bad seals, however you have to determine how much oil you are using over what period of time. you will use some oil thru normal running conditions ,but not very much.
Check the transmission fluid level. If it's up, check if it's burned. Burned transmission fluid will look darker and smell burned as well. If it's burned, the clutches are worn out.
change in color, evaporate, burned out lol vanish
Mercury can be heated and will then evaporate. Whether that is overheating depends on why you are heating it in the first place. It will not be distorted or burned, etc., by heating.
transmission oil will be dirty, blckish and more than likely smell like it is burned
No, once the transmission clutches are burned up they must be replaced.
Typically, it'll be black or something close to it once its burned. It always appears brownish to me and has a very bad smell. The smell more than anything let's you know the transmission have overheated and the fluid has been burnt.
If the ATF dipstick reads full, the transmission is likely burned out.
if it runs hotter it will evaporate gas before it is burned and will reduce performance considerably. i need more information to answer your question better
bulb burned out; fuse/circuit breaker open
The composition of smoke depends on the nature of the burning fuel and the conditions of combustion, for example, when paper/wood is burned, the smoke you see is those volatile hydrocarbons evaporating from the wood. Combustion causes things within the fuel, or object being burned, to evaporate - this is smoke.
Fluid is burned due to overheating Change fluid and filter Fluid is burned due to overheating Change fluid and filter
Worn bands Dirty/burned fluid Plugged filter