After changing the filter, gasket and fluid, and installing new steel trans cooler lines, I went to circulate the fluid by idling the car in neutral, planning to shift through the gears and get my '82 SX/4 (automatic) driving for the first time in 5 months.
When I started the car and went to shift through the gears, the car died in neutral with my foot on the brake. I adjusted the idle speed and tried again (my carb still needs to be adjusted correctly since rebuilding). This time, it idled very high and dropped about half the rpms in neutral, but stayed running. About 30 seconds later, the car started smoking real bad. I shifted back into park, as the engine seemed to be picking up the idle speed, and shut the car off quick. When I looked under the car, the smoke was pouring out of the bell housing.
My cooler lines leaked a little bit in one spot, but not enough for me to think they were the problem. The trans pan had at least a gallon of fluid in it as well. I hope I put the lines in the correct direction for my new external cooler, can someone clarify which connection on the trans(toward the front of car or rear) is the output?
I know the throttle linkage isn't adjusted correctly. It has rusted a bit, and the clip holding it together disappeared, along with the spring. I just connected the rod to the linkage when I was under there changing the lines.
I should probably check the adjustment of the gearshift linkage. One other thing I did was route the cooler lines around the rods instead of behind them. Don't know if this will be a problem, but it did obstruct the shift rod until I bent it away a little.
I read this could be due to the torque converter locking up when it shouldn't, or maybe the transfer case was in neutral. Any ideas what could have been causing the smoke?