Dexron III is not fully synthetic; it is a type of automatic Transmission Fluid (ATF) that is primarily a mineral oil-based product, although it may contain some synthetic additives to enhance performance. The Dexron series, including Dexron III, was developed by General Motors for use in their vehicles. While there are synthetic alternatives available that meet or exceed Dexron III specifications, the original formulation is not considered synthetic.
yes
If it is a A/T Powerglide, you can use Dexron or a synthetic such as Mobil 1 ATF. You may not be able to find Dexron, but you can use Dexron II or Dexron III.
Use Shell, Dexron 111 if its automatic.
It's not red because it might old. Get dexron which is universal meaning it's compatible with other types of dextron (general, semi-synthetic, synthetic).
dexron 111 atf
Dexron III/Mercon automotive transmission fluid (ATF) is generally recommended as a replacement fluid for automatic transmissions meeting original equipment manufacturers (O.E.M.) performance requirements for current General Motors, Ford, other domestic and imported passenger cars, vans and light trucks where DEXRON II, DEXRON II-E, DEXRON III, AND Ford/MERCON fluids are specified.Dexron VI is a partial synthetic which properties exceed dexron III by 100% in every area. Dexron VI can not be interchanged or repalced with DEXRON II, DEXRON II-E, DEXRON III, DEXRON-III/MERCON.
A 2002 yukon automatic transmission requires dexron III. GM now offers Dexron VI transmission fluid which is supposed to be better and also backwards compatible with older dexron fluids.
dextron 111 is suitable for all tranny applications that previously used dextron 11. (cw)
No. Use only the recommended fluid (from the dealer) or risk destroying your transmission. Seriously.
If you have a 2 speed Powerglide A/T use Dexron 3 or a Synthetic.
Motul Dexron III Synthetic. It's made in France. Really good.
There is no such oil as Dexron 4, there is Dexron 6 (VI).