Well, since I started this latest thread on ATF I'm now doing my best Brett Favre imitation and saying..."uh, just a second, let me think about this again."
I read for literally hours yesterday re lubes/bearings/bushings and here is the (latest) conclusion I have come to:
(Note that this is rather long and probably of the "who cares, I just use the factory recommended oil" category. I'm not saying I'd argue with that!)
From everything I have read, ATF has plenty of anti-wear properties suitable for the meshing/impact operation of spur gears (like on the commando tranny). It is NOT suitable for hypoid gears but there are none of those in the gearbox. Thinner viscosity oils in general lubricate bearings better because they easily get into all surfaces more easily than thicker oils. They also transfer heat better. ATF has no EP additives that can adversely affect yellow metals (brass/bronze) like the bushings present in the Norton tranny. Though EP additives are needed for helical/bevel/hypoid gears, they are not necessary with spur gears. ATF has less resistance to the gears spinning than gear oil.
OTOH, one must overcome the the natural tendency to ignore the factory recommendations (and logic involved) to put GEAR OIL into a GEARbox. Coupled with this is the history of knowing that gear oil works just fine in the application. Even if ATF might be better, what practical "betterness" does it provide? Based again on all my reading and what I gathered from it, I would say that ATF would theoretically provide longer life for bushings, better lubrication for the bearings and, due to being thinner, less resistance to spinning the gears. But does this translates into any really useful improvement? The only way to tell would be to put two new gearboxes, one with ATF, one with gear oil on a test stand and somehow expose them to the same load cycles and then disassemble them and check everything. At the same time, one could measure if there was any difference in power at the output shaft due to lower spinning resistance.
Further reading indicated that this was the reason that many auto trannies are now using ATF as a fill instead of gear oil and that ATF is a "retro-spec" in many transmissions as well. The key issue is the type of gears being used. In general, if they are spur (straight cut) then ATF is the fill; if they are other than that or a transaxle (ring and pinion) is involved, EP gear oil is used. There is no issue whatsover with ball/roller bearings - they work best with thinner lubricants anyway. Heck, I even read that water is used as a bearing lubricant in many applications and forms the same film between the surfaces that other lubricants do and it cools better and provides longer life than oil. But obviously it can't be used in an environment where rust can form so we won't be filling gearboxes with distilled water!
So I have Farved myself back into definitely leaving the ATF in the tranny.
I think...
