well you obviously have a transmission leak
look under car to find out where
could also have a bad torque converter that is sucking fluid ,but this also will leak somewhere as it over fills
a good indication is look where the oil starts on under side of car
if at front of transmission could be torque converter or front seal
could be as simple as pan gasket
if oil starts at rear of transmission look at rear seal
rear seal is the easiest and cheapest fix
hope that's all it is
It is important to use the right type of transmission fluid in a car. The 1997 F350 Diesel uses Mercon III transmission fluid.
The amount of transmission fluid that a Ford F350 will hold depends on the size of the transmission. The average is about 19.2 quarts of transmission fluid. The specs can be checked in stores during purchase. Over filling will cause problems with shifting.
The 1987 Ford F3 50 transmission fluid capacity is 8.3 quarts. You can check the transmission fluid level with the transmission dipstick.
look in your owners manual.
there is a plug in the side of the transmission. Remove the plug, the fluid should be up to the hole just before running out.
Let the car get to runnin temp pull the transmission dip stick out and check level car must be on level ground
mercon sp
According to the owners manual - transfer case fluid - Motorcraft MERCON ATF ( automatic transmission fluid )
mercon, not merconV matters not if its auto or manual. They all use the same
If you are talking about the transfer case on the transmission....it would be any brand of 90 weight oil.
if it is an automatic look under the hood near the back and locate the transmission dip stick. Remove the dipstick and put a funnel in that's where the fluid goes. Standard transmission has gear oil and is completely differant.
The dipstick should be on the passenger side near the firewall, it should have a yellow handle that says trans oil.