A swamp cooler may leak from the roof due to several reasons, including clogged drain lines, improper installation, or a malfunctioning water pump. If the drain line is blocked, excess water can back up and overflow. Additionally, if the cooler is not sloped correctly or if there's a crack in the unit, water can escape. Regular maintenance and inspection can help prevent these issues.
No, it can't. Not from the oil cooler.
It can leak at the connections or the cooler itself could have a hole in it.
transmission cooler
Bad seal? Leaking cooler line?
Find the leak source and repair it. Usually the cause is cooler hoses.
If you run the transmission low on fluid you can cause damage. Fix the leak.
The most common leak points are the cooler hoses and the axle shaft seals.
There are multiple locations for which to trace an oil leak. These are the filter mount, cooler hoses, the cooler itself, oil pan and gasket, valve covers and main seal.
There is no one answer. The entire transmission, all trans cooler lines, and the trans cooler all have fluid in them. Anything that contains fluid has the potential to leak anywhere. On a transmission there are a number of moving parts, such as input shafts and output shafts, each with a seal. That is a likely source for a leak, esp given the age of this transmission. Another likely source for a leak is the rubber cooler lines and/or the clamps. But really, the entire transmission body can leak at any seal or gasket. There are literally dozens of opportunities for a transmission to leak. The only way to find it is raise the vehicle and search out the leak.
Possible trany cooler leak
HEadgasket failure, internal oil cooler leak.