I have a 08 Altima 3.5SL. I have the CVT serviced every 60,000 miles. I have 260,000 miles on it, and so far no trouble. Just take care of your car, and it will take care of you.
Father of Indika damn, I have an all black 2011 Maxima. The paint has corroded in places but the car still runs perfectly. I think I’ll sell it and get the wife a Honda Fit or a Toyota Landcruiser. 😀
I Have an 07, 250k is when I first experienced limp mode. After much research I put an oil cooler on it. Ran good for a while. Now close to 300k. The whining started Friday, Saturday I had the car towed home. Currently, researching what to do. Don't have the money for car payments. Hoping to find an honest mechanic who is willing to replace the issue and not the whole CVT. Can't afford that shit either.
I worked for Nissan and own a '13 Versa. Did my trans services every 25-30K miles, and my CVT still died at about 110K. These transmissions are very known for failure, but they Nissan remanufactured transmissions are rebuilt with the updated parts and we hardly had any issues with them once replaced. If you notice your cruising RPMs are getting higher than they use to be, it means the trans is starting to go out.
Sometimes it literally depends on the trans, people will still tell you " take care of car and it will take care of you"..had a 13 Altima babied it never went over 80mph n still died at 93,000 bought it at 80,000.. depends on the trans Maxima CVT by far the strongest.
@@kingaza7734 you bought it at 80,000miles and babied it to 93,000??? You DO realize someone DIDN'T baby it for 80,000 miles before you. You cant expect the tranny to last long just because you babied it at the end.
I don’t see RPMs going up but if I drive long distances when I push on the gas it won’t accelerate what do you think the problem is. I have a Nissan Sentra 2012 or 200,000 miles
@luyyyu never mattered bro. Because every time I changed the gear box I would obviously change the CVT. Most Nissan models obviously have transmission heating issues, and several motoring agencies recommend installation of gear box coolers
Same, they are shit and have God awful customer service, going to buy Teslas from now on anyways so it does not matter, but I do hope they go bankrupt.
This was the best video I have seen describing the transmission issues that myself and many others are having right now. And it was definitely tied into a broken radiator that had a slow leak for the longest of time that never produced the puddle on the floor. The car started shuttering and doing crazy things around the 93,000 mile mark (it now has 100k on it). My mechanic determined that the computer, the ECU unit went bad and I spent $1,000 having that repaired last week... Most of the shaking went away, but then I found out my radiator needed to be repaired which was another $450. After all that, when I shift into reverse or drive, the car still jumps forward and still makes crazy noises when accelerating and now my mechanic is saying that the transmission is failing and not to waste the money on it. I will never purchase another Nissan vehicle ever again after this incident. I am driving a 2013 Nissan rogue that was gifted to me from a family member in 2019 and I barely got 5 years out of it.. I poured in a product called lubegard which thickens the viscosity of the new transmission fluid that I put in there which is a CVT transmission fluid, and it is helping a little bit but at this point I am just going to drive this car into the ground. I'm hoping I can get at least another year or two out of it because I do not have the finances to replace this vehicle and I don't think anyone is going to take this vehicle off my hands with a known transmission issue for a decent price. I was also under the impression that you never change the transmission fluid, which is clearly not true either and if you look at the manual from the Nissan rogue, you'll see they never mention replacing the transmission fluid either. This is all the racket and they want your car to fail so you end up purchasing another one sooner than expected. Lesson learned.
I have 2014 Sentra sr . I bought it yesterday for 1500 with 123k on it. Was driving it home and the speedo goes out. P0500 .. 60 bucks.. I'm seriously thinking of just taking it back and getting my money back.. wyt?
Yup. They say "Lifetime" fluid but what they mean by that is the lifetime of the transmission, NOT the car! So yeah of course the fluid will last the life of the transmission cuz the transmission ain't gonna be doing it's job for to long without maintenance 😅 It's not Just Nissan, alot of manufacturers are pushing "lifetime" fluid. I still tell people to change their trans fluid every 60k ( 30k for a Nissan CVT) especially cuz a lot of modern transmissions no longer have filters you can change. Just did a CVT fluid and filter change on a Sentra that had 102k miles. The magnetic pickups in the pan were both Bulked up with metal sludge from transmission wear...
I bought Nissan Roque 2017 and I driving 7 years already never got trouble or fix anything just change the oil only and now I plan to buy another Nissan Roque 2024 again because I love Nissan, at least Nissan make by Japan still more better than make in Korea or China or Vietnam.
Periodic fluid changes, keeping the engine and transmission clean and cool, and not putting excessive stress on the car when driving, like driving it to hard, frequent and quick accelerations from stop or when increasing speed, pulling a trailer, etc... ) are key to the longevity of CVT transmission based vehicles. It is especially imperative for a Nissan Rogue. I have a first generation Rogue from 2011, bought it new at the dealership on Labor Day 2011. Always did my own work on it; it never went to a shop, except for new tire mounting, never had any issue with it other than common wear items, tires, brakes, battery, tune up, fluid changes, etc... Just this past Saturday 10/14/23, the transmission finally went out at 168,500 miles as I was driving about 40 MPH, just casual driving as usual. My rogue was the most dependable car I ever owned up until this past Saturday. Guess I was one of the few fortunate owners whose JATCO transmission lasted that long without having any issues. I've had mechanics tell me they were surprised it was lasting as long as it did, right up to the end. RIP 2011 Nissan Rogue!
Understand your reason I've liked Nissan since the 90s but if I upgrade anytime soon I'm going with Toyota/Lexus products plus Nissan is getting too pricey brand new if they gonna charge 30k for a Altima the transmission shouldn't be going out at all
Reasonable fluid changes and not beating on it has worked for me on a 2010 Maxima and a 2016 Altima. Both into the 150K range with no issues. CVTs don't stand up to abuse and Nissan's lifetime fluid stand (US only) is crazy. I use Castrol CVT fluid in my Nissan and Honda.
I use the Castro CVT fluid also. I have been running Trans Tune in it 100 miles or so before change. My 2007 Altima just hit 210,000 and my 2009 Maxima just hit 170,000. No issues besides normal maintenance. Knock on wood. I do oil changes every 3k, and have been doing Transmission every 30k. Overkill I know but it’s easy to do so why not. They both get good gas mileage and were cheap. My son drives the Altima to school and back and my Maxima I take to work etc. great cars. I don’t know if I would ever buy one new though.
Something that is also available for the nissan jatco transmissions are cvt cooler adapters. The cooler adapter allows you to mount an auxiliary radiator mounted transmissions cooler to your car. It's an upgrade to the system. Also, in my experience with working on these transmissions, changing the fluid at 30k is about right as long as you have a cooler kit set up and do not forget to change out both filters. You have a pan filter and you have a filter behind the stock cooler. People forget about the cooler filter all the time. I also use the Idmitsu NS-2 fluid on these.
My 2013 calls for NS-3 but still does not help with the poor pump design. Nissan got extended warranty but I would not have problems until 20K miles later to reach 100K miles.
Thanks for the info. Where can I get an "auxiliary cooler" and what do they cost..? Also, is it fairly easy to install.... and any idea about labor cost to install..? How much extra does it hold...? Thanks.
@@mm-jx7gf Most auto part stores and online part websites like rockauto is usually the cheapest. Oreilys sells Hayden brand, I got a bypass model as I live in the cold zone, I want to warm up fast not slower by adding additional cooler in the snow. Cold start damage is as bad as overheating. Or you can add additional thermostat to regular cooler.
Just had to have my 2016 Nissan Altima transmission replaced. 60,000 miles. It was starting to slip and jerk during high speeds or when hitting the gas. It was covered by the extended warrenty that Nissan put in place due to this very issue. They replaced the entire transmission at no cost. And I'm glad to see the comments about how the new replacement transmissions are not having so many problems.
My friends 2015 Altima's CVT failed. Nissan said "no" to replacing it under extended warrenty. But yes to a rebuilt $6,200 CVT. My friend is pursuing the complaint strategy to Nissan, BBB, NTSB.
I currently own Nissan Altima 2014 model. It has 230k kms on it. Its a 3.5 SL V6 CVT GCC spec model. The only issues I had since car being driven this high (mostly highway) and being 8 years old are the following: 1. Shift lock switch failure. 2. Sun visor making fracturing noise. 3. Dash board touch screen stopped working. Have to use buttons to navigate. Other than that the precautions I regularly take are: A. change CVT oil every 40k-50k kms to keep it well lubricated. B. Always change engine oil every 8k-10k kms fully synthetic. C. Spark plugs every 80k kms. D. Air filter every 15k kms. E. Engine coolant every 200k kms. F. Brake fluid every 80k kms. G. Power steering fluid every 120k kms. Lessons learnt: Don’t follow what dealership is asking you to do. Follow owners manual for exact details. (Beware owners manual doesnt show when to replace the transmission fluid) dealerships say to never replace it, as it is lifetime oil. DO NOT LISTEN TO THEM. For further car details you can subscribe to my youtube channel for specific advise.
I bought a Versa new in 2012. Since new, when the car was cold upon first driving, the CVT would make a horrible crunching noise as it transitioned from the low to high speed ratios. Otherwise, it drove fine. Since it was my first CVT car ever, I assumed it was normal. I brought it into the dealership at 30k miles to have the first fluid change. The owner's manual said it could go as long as 60k miles under the normal service schedule. So I felt I was being proactive. The dealership said they didn't change the fluid because their computer said the fluid was still clean and told me to come back at 50k miles. At 38k miles the CVT started slipping, but only during one very specific part of my afternoon commute. Of course, since the issue wasn't always present, the dealership said it was fine. I knew these transmissions are expensive to replace and I wouldn't be able to afford the replacement should it happen, so I sold the car at 56k miles since it was on the verge of running out of warranty at 60k miles. I loved the car, but need a better piece of mind from a more reliable car.
@@junaidgt90 145k on my 2013 so far. It may help that my miles are easy with very little city driving...but talking about heat--I live in the Arizona desert with no after market cooler.
audioman628 I read an article that said they were about to go bankrupt over money mismanagement along with making the cars too expensive. So, it was a survival move, but I agree that the brand quality really took a nose dive when they went to Renault.
Russell Hancock Nissan is part of an alliance not a merger! Carlos Ghosn was the guy who started to cut costs and everything, Makoto Uchida is saving Nissan he’s putting the money in the quality and innovation.
The funny thing is I just opened a letter from Nissan last night saying I got a warranty extension because of the transmission for 7 years and/or 80k miles. Now this video shows in my feed 😂
I searched my problem on Google search and found your video. I helped your algorithm 😁 by liking the video. Stay happy my friend I appreciate the information in your video you’re very knowledgeable.
I have a 2013 Pathfinder and as of today 168,101 miles with no transmission problems. Thanks to my transmission shop who recommended a tranny service/flush, not just fluid exchange every 30,000 miles this SUV has been working fine except for normal maintenance issues, battery, brakes, etc. Great video with good data.
You really have it good because the 2022 Nissan Pathfinder will come standard with a nine-speed automatic transmission, replacing the previous-generation's CVT.Feb 8,
That’s great to hear ! I also have a 2013 pathfinder with 140k miles but the transmission has never been serviced 😮 my serpentine belt popped recently but other than that no other major issues .
My 2018 Pathfinder has 108,000 miles on it. I replace four quarts of transmission fluid every third oil change. It's a small maintenance step to prevent a huge transmission bill. No issues so far.
I have a 2013 Nissan Altima 130k miles had her for about 3 years and she hasn’t gave me any problems at all not a single one she’s been very good to me. As long as you take care of your car you should be fine i always make an oil change every 3 months replaced spark plugs replaced belt, new battery terminals transmission fluid flush brake flush. Shocks and struts replaced. As long as you keep up with your maintenance you should be fine
I have an opportunity to buy a 2013 Altima in perfect shape. Dies when you put in gear. Does anyone think it’s the valve body?? A lot of people say valve body and filter
Yep, wish I had done my research before buying my Rogue. CVT failed one month after I bought it. Battled with several leaks in my cooling system, and ultimately had to replace the whole transmission with a rebuilt one that had an improved cooler. Then I battled with getting the transmission fluid level exactly right, because it was still overheating! Eventually I installed a condenser/cooler just like the one you showed and got the transmission fluid just right. It's been a couple years now and everything is working like it should. Surprisingly, the original transmission lasted about 150k miles. On some of these vehicles, the CVT pops after as few as 25-30k miles. I'm grateful to people like you who make consumers aware of these sorts of problems. Unfortunately, I was screwed as soon as I bought the damn car. Never buying a Nissan again, or any vehicle with a CVT for that matter.
I almost once had my Honda CVT ruined by technician at dealer. He under-filled the fluid below the min mark of dipstick. I drove few km and the humming noise flared up in the cabin. I checked the dipstick and it booms paycheck goofy-ball for dealer. I have bought another bottle of DW1 ATF. The noise is gone. Thank TH-cam mechanic who taught how to check aft fluid in CVT.
@10:40 I almost guarentee that Nissan would try to blame the CVT failure on the aftermarket cooling system, even if it didn't actually cause the problem. Like insurance companies, car companies will find any reason to try to not honor their warranty. My Nissan dealership tried to say I voided my warranty because I had a bluetooth ODB sensor plugged into the ODB port.
Another reason for limp mode and transmission overheating is mismatched tire circumferences. My donut spare in the trunk made the transmission overheat, it was not a big deal
I stumbled on this and you NAILED it!! Mine started happening on long trips at least after two hours on the road. It wld do everything you said and drop to 60 mph and I cldnt do anything to fix it. I called Nissan and they acted like they had never heard of this problem. I knew that was wrong because forums were talking about it. Needless to say I cldnt get it fixed at Nissan cause they had know idea. So I took it to another shop and they told me I needed a new transmission. ($4600😳im not sure it’s even worth doing that..it wld be a CVT again🤦🏼♀️) At the time I was like what? Well long story short...two years later, I’ve drove it just around town and have 176,000 miles on it. It’s the two door altima....It hasn’t done anything like it use to on the highway but I WONT drive it out of town. I’m thinking it’s time to let her go. I really enjoyed this vehicle!! You have no idea how happy to hear you say all of this. I knew I wasn’t crazy and tried to explain everything like you did to the dealer... this was a great video. Thank you 🙏
I have a 2019 Sentra that is at the dealer now being looked at for CVT issues. It has 74,000 miles. The fluid and filters were changed out last October (2022....it is now August 2023 as I write this). The other day it started doing this thing where there is like a momentary hesitation going down the road. It occurs at about 2000rpm between 40 and 60mph. When this happens, I feel a momentary loss of power that lasts 2-3 seconds and the tach goes up to about the 2250rpm mark, then it drops back down. Trying to get out in front of this, I took it to the Nissan dealer first thing yesterday morning. That is when the service rep told me that Nissan knows their CVT is a crap design and that they have extended the transmission warranty from 60,000 to 80,000 miles. I talked to the service rep a few hours ago and was told that they have been driving and testing it, but it is not kicking out an error code. And if the ECM does not put out an error code, then they cannot make good on the warranty. I will know more later today, but at the moment, I feel that Nissan is likely to be lying to customers and getting out of the expense of issuing a warranty replacement by saying that there is no code.
I came across your video because I have a 2017 Nissan Sentra purchased used from a dealership; it has been making a whining sound on acceleration then recently a jerking sensation. I took it to a Nissan dealership which they diagnosed that the transmission has to be replaced. Your video gave an excellent explanation of what is happening to the CVT trans better than the dealership. Thank you.
I have a 2016 Altima that the CVT is being worked on right now. I am so thankful I have extended Warrenty coverage. I feel like getting an Avalon with a traditional transmission. A car with 63,000 should not need to have replacement parts.
Better ask a lot of questions about what they replace because they put DAMAGED old parts back in mine with warranty and they wont be covered …..so what do you think fails next …the old damaged parts of course which won’t be covered by the repair warranty. Also the service mgr said they replace with USED PARTS not new. So much deceit…
I have 2016 Versa Note. It just started doing everything you said. 102,000 miles. I had no idea what was going on. It all happened at once. I barely made it home. It's been parked for 10 days.
I had a 09 Versa. 160 000 miles I had a tick just like a lifter. I took it to a Nissan Dealer for fluid change. When it was done I asked what is that noise, he said a lifter. I said wrong side of motor, he said have not heard that before and walked away. Shortly after that a few days it would not pull itself. I called The dealer and Nissan. I was told you need a new CVT not parts for it . It can't be fixed and no warranty. I parked it for 8 years until a friend told me about one he had. He said a $30 step motor from e-bay may fix it. I used his hi priced code reader and it said step motor. I pulled the pan up plugged small motor and 2 bolts. Ordered one and it fixed it. Used old new fluid and old gasket. It works great. Fuel gage stuck at 1/4 . I call that they tried to stick it to me. Try step motor if code comes up as step motor. $30.i sold it no more nissan for me
Sounds like many of these cvt nissan owners don't know much about properly maintaining these vehicles. The cvt is a very sensitive transmission and if you drive it a lot during hot climate and never bother replacing the fluid, it will eventually shudder and vibrate and goes into limp mode. I have a 2010 nissan maxima and drain and fill the tranny fluid every 30K miles and also changed the transmission filter and it has never once let me down or stranded anywhere. Drives and shifts smooth as butter as long as you properly maintain the fluid! My car is at 190K miles now and drives like new! Just drove it from NC to Colorado and back about a month ago and it drove beautifully. In fact...I've taken it on many out of state road trips and never once worried it would leave me stranded.
Honestly thank you so much for this video. This was so helpful in explaining why my car was having issues. The mechanics didn't even tell me this when my car had trouble.
Nissan is JUNK. I also have a Sentra and it is a piece of crap, and the dealership wants to do nothing about it. Nissan has been sued about their transmissions, and mine has multiple other problems including no working AC in Florida. Very expensive work needed and it should just go to the dump. Nissan is a totally and completely irresponsible company and their sales people and their service people are all scammers and liars, and that’s my experience.
I never knew about CVT transmissions until mine started going out. Now I see why many dealerships have rental Nissans in the parking lot at 40k mileage.
@@TheMinijacky roof leaks, or engine/transmission failure lol I wonder what's the better choice. I have a GX470, 06, 240,000 miles on it, never had any major issues with it. I have an 02 sequoia with 239,000 miles, never had a major issue with it, just regular maintenance. Toyota makes the best engine/transmission combos in the car industry hands down. There's multiple 2UZ-FE engines with over a million miles on them without a rebuild, how many Nissan's are out there with that mileage, none.
I have a 2012 Nissan Sentra with 154,000 miles on it. I bought it brand new from the dealer, so all the miles on the car are mine. I have the receipt for everything ever done to it in a file in the glove box. I don’t babysit the throttle. I noticed early on the difference in how the CVT transmission drives, especially how it changes gears. I’ve learned over the years to allow the car to properly down shift as I’m coming to a stop. Anyone who has this vehicle knows that when you let off the gas to come to a stop you can feel the car still in gear and at a certain point it will free up and float like it’s in neutral. My experience is to allow the car to get to that neutral point before coming to a complete stop. Whenever I’ve come to a very hard stop it’s like the trans gets jammed up and it takes a half second before you can accelerate again. So, my advice is to allow your car to come to that neutral position before coming to a complete stop, ensuring that you are not coming to a hard/abrupt stop and then not trying to take off too fast after the stop. Basically, even though this little car can zip, it’s not a race car. Also, every car needs a good two hour drive at highway speed every few months or so just to blow the dust off the engine. Whenever I make a trip from Houston to Austin and back, my engine always runs super smooth. Best of luck all! ✨👌🏾
I ended up filing a case with nissan headquarters and the ntsa for the transmission. I bought my car in 2015 with only 20k miles or so on the dash. After 5 yrs clunk. They already had a hood latch recall( it actually flunk open driving down a highway) a computer reset recall,and that issue. I stated that claim about the warranty cut off because they knew that system had issues. I actually won, but wasnt satisfactory to my liking enough. 2500 repair and 3 day new car rental..I wanted 100%
Nissan CVT Transmissions have been failing through out the model lines for several year models. Models like Altima, Versa, Sentra, Juke, Rogue, Pathfinder, Murano all have the same issues. Many develop a “shudder”, “Judder” or “vibration” as described by many owners and used car dealers. The Jilcat Proline CVT Supplement has stopped the shudder repeatedly all across the country for most of the applications it has been applied. There is a separate Torque Converter issue (Code P0074 or P0075) that is different from the shudder. It actually feels like a stall when you stop and the vehicle has issues at take off. This would require a flush process and refill with OEM fluid. We have found by adding 2 bottles of Jilcat CVT Supplement in with the fresh fluid we have cleared up that problem in many cases. There is NO GUARANTEE the Jilcat Product will work but in almost every attempt we have seen success. Try this before you spend $2000 or $3000 replacing the transmission. th-cam.com/video/mM-nkoWUfk0/w-d-xo.html [Nissan vibrates] [CVT issues] [why does my Altima shake] [what can I do about my Murano vibrating when I drive] [Murano transmission issue] [Rogue transmission vibration] [Juke has a vibration] [additive to help Nissan CVT] [how to fix my Pathfinder transmission] Check it out the CVT fix here: under $50! www.jilcat.com/product/cvt-transmission-supplement-1-bottle-35-dont-replace-that-nissan-cvt/
For Altima, do all you can to limit/ lower heat, includes minimum coolant-water ratio, 30k change both filters, best cvt fluid, seal the too-leaky cooling plenum, keep radiators clean...I found this to be enough for Mojave hard and hot conditions now 209k.
My 2016 Altima SR is running like new going on 68,000 miles. No CVT failures or issues. The only thing I had replaced were getting new brakes and rotors, and battery since purchasing the car in 2016.
Hey Marv, I have the exact same year and model. Thing has been flawless besides an over tightened battery bracket. Which cracked the case after the first year. All I've ever done besides that is breaks oil and tires. Well today at 110,000 I'm shuddering. Luckily I was 3 blocks from my house and babied it home. Today is also the first time of hearing about the class action lawsuit against Nissan transmissions. It was a garbage from day one and they knew it. Shame everything else has been solid, I have been nothing but praising it. Three more payments left. So much for enjoy life without a loan. I'm not dropping 3 to 5 grand on it for a new garbage trany. Also never buying anything Nissan again
i've been looking into this a lot as I have two daughters with Nissan. It's not cheap, but seems to be the best fluid on the market, does not void warranty, etc AMSOIL CVT fluid. I plan on doing cooling/auxiliary filter change, drain and refill on my daughters cars.
I have 2010 maxima with 205 000 miles on original cvt transmission still running strong. I think not hot rodding it is the reason for it lasting plus I use Amsoil cvt fluid
I think the problem with cvts is mainly due to the small beehive cooler / heat exchanger that is fitted onto the unit being inefficient at cooling the fluid. I think if they ran the lines through the lower radiator tank (concentric oil cooler) it would be better
Very informational video! The first point would cause more cold start damage if you live in the cold winter in the northern as adding regular transmission cooler would cause more damage for sure if CVT fluid is not warm enough before aggressive acceleration, bypass cooler or adding additional thermostat would be good in both worlds. As for the second point, someone in the comment section did CVT fluid change every 25K miles but still failed at 110K miles so make sure the paper cartridge cooler filter after taking off wheel liner on driver's side is also changed to prevent clogging. I want to add fifthly, drop the transmission pan and change the metal mesh filter housing and nitrile rubber O ring with the paper cartridge cooler filter, o ring is the key of shifting bad as it's how filter looses suction from bottom of the transmission pan, while dropping the pan, I would advise to clean metal shavings on two magnets and I just added a third one, I have heard people added three more magnets even. My dealer said there is no filters so they only used exchange machine to change 5 qt last time without changing the paper filter and reprogrammed CVT under free recall at 43K miles, I am doing it by myself this time with Idemitsu N3 fluid at 80K miles. Sixth would be never rev over 2000 rpm or even 1500 rpm before CVT fluid temperature warms up to 40C/104F according to CVTz50 app but I believe it should be even 45C/113F, IMO, at least 35C/95F, as repair manual says fluid change between 35C/95F and 45/113F. It's also the temperature for fluid change. Nissan has cold start protection in TCM anyways tho. I am lucky to live 10 minutes away from freeway entrance before reving up with cruise control to help acceleration to 65 mph, Recently, I have been monitoring temperature of CVT and engine for each drive, this makes car driving like a lab test now. FYI, I am a former engineering student liking to rebuild my cars and help fixing other people's car. Oh the seventhly, turning on rear window defroster will reduce horsepower and cause vibration somehow on my 2013 Versa, worn or over tightening or cold & hard squeaking serpentine belt can also affect acceleration, Nissan/Jatco made most sensitive transmissions but I heard Jatco 2022 CVT-X (JF022E) is finally redesigned better, we will see comparing to Toyota's latest Aisin CVT. It should be better than CVT-7 and CVT-8. It's used on Qashqai in Europe since June 2021already.
Family member had an accident and looking for a car. I said DO NOT BUY A NISSAN PERIOD. “Look at my new car!” O no🤦🏾♂️. Thanks for the information. I can help a lot of my family and friends who have Nissans. My 2013 sentra transmission went out just after 60k . Of course just out of factory warranty. Thanks You so much for this video.
Yesterday I receive a letter from Nissan saying that my car transmission is extended to ...7 years or 84.000 miles .Whatever come first . I have 2016 Altima , with 28.000 miles , and so far I don't have any problems with the car. Drives beautiful , and I hope continues the same way. I also drive moderate , not crazy speed driving in the highway !!!.....Nice and easy !!!
Oh my Nissan problems with the transmission and other stuff like the AC unit, & rubber on the car started around 25K. I also have a Honda and the rubber is in great shape, the AC still works, etc… & the SUV is a 2010. With low mileage. I’d never buy Nissan again, it’s a total piece of garbage car that belongs in the dump.
I bought an '07 Murano with 41,000 miles. It didn't make it to 42K. Three dealerships said these transmissions are NEVER repaired, and repair parts are not available. The dealership I bought it from ghosted me. All that was available at the dealerships were factory rebuilt units, and they wanted $9500 for it. Aamco did it for $5400. Nissan warrants theirs for 12 months, 12000 miles. Aamco warrants theirs for 30 months, 60000 miles. My last vehicle was a Nissan Frontier with 4 catalytic converters; all four were wreckled at the same time by a computer glitch at 100,000 miles, which Nissan admitted, but took no responsibility for. I WILL NEVER BUY ANOTHER NISSAN!!!
My transmission was going bad so I jacked up the nissan up high nd I put it I. Reverse for 5 minutes .. by doing that i drove the nissan Nd till now not had a problem ..I still haven't did no tune up on the transmission.. I had problems at 200k since I drove it in Reverse it running just fine at 225k.. your video are very good.. keep up the good work
The video was very imformative and you point out the problems these vehicles are experiencing. It helps us to identify and send back comments for advise. Thanks again.
@@WrenchLink thanks . After my fluid ( expensive factory type)was changed on my 2007 Nissan x-trail . The winnings has started 4 months later . Should I change fluid again and filter?
@@WrenchLink Hey I was hoping for some advice from you. My sentra 09 base 2.0 with 170k miles started jerking hard when accelerating between 20-40 mph and especially after driving for a long period. I'm going to get it checked at the dealer and see what they say but I was wondering if you thought a transmission cooler would help me out and if you could recommend one.
I've noticed after driving about 75 miles in one day, the engine RPM on my Nissan Murano nearly doubles from around 2000 RPM to about 3500 RPM at around 60 MPH.
The Rogue transmission began to go when it was at 65 mph, and the transmission got hot. It has a leak. Trying to find how to replace the vent hose. Transmission fluid was all over the top of the engine burning fumes into the car. Which is why I'm here. But the rpm should not increase that much.
Avoid buying a Nissan or Mitsubishi with a JATCO built CVT. They have terrible resale value. Buy a Toyota or a Kia.... seriously. Buy an aftermarket transmission cooler and change CVT fluid with the Nissan recommended type AND FILTERS (theres 2 filters) every 25-30,000 miles. Also make sure the CVT fluid fill plug is in its place. As the CVT fluid heats it obviously expands. This literally can cause the plugs to be popped out by the pressure build up.
I'm a rideshare driver w/ a 2016 Altima. For me, it's Service the fluid @ every 4 oil Changes (24K Mi). It holds up well on this schedule. I'm also in TX. and the CVT has a cooler.
CVT Sucks and Nissan too..... I've ad 2 transmissions and still Nissan did not support me. Thank you for the help full information. i wish you continued success with your business. God Bless
Very informative. The CVT was replaced on my 2016 Sentra by Nissan at 27,000 miles. Not to long ago my vehicle started making the humming/ howling/ whining sound when acceleration past 30mph. I had a feeling it could be related to CVT. 🤦🏻♂️ I just passed 40,000 miles too. Anyways, I told my Nissan dealership/service department about it but they said they couldn’t replicate the issue. 😏 Here’s the thing. I’ve had a lot of warranty work done on my car from Factory Warranty to my Nissan Extended Warranty Coverage. I’ve kept up with all the basic maintenance services recommended by Nissan and more. I even went with the premium services that the owners service manual recommended for better vehicle performance. No one has worked on my car besides my Nissan dealership. I’ve had power train issues, control arm rod crankshaft replacements, Factory stereo replaced, whole A/C system replacement, 2 additional A/C Blower Motor replacements, CVT replacement, and a whole lot more. I’ve come to the conclusion that it’s either 1 of 3 things. One it’s the technicians and service advisors who are purposely messing up my Sentra to make commission money off of the extended warranty coverage pay out. Two it’s that the service technicians are just idiots who have little knowledge of their trade with only one master technician teaching them a little bit of the trade. The most basic stuff and they still mess it up. Or it’s both. 😒 I think my own Nissan Dealership made it a Lemon. They set me up for the Lemon Law route. 🤷🏻♂️
I’m going through a very similar situation with my 2018 Versa note with the exception of tranny being replaced. I live out here in Guam so I’m probably thinking it’s just the workmanship of the vehicles themselves. I just made 35k miles. This will be my last year for the powertrain warranty. I could either purchase an additional 2 year powertrain warranty for $2500 or trade it in for a new car. This really bites because I just paid it off last year and the car is acting like it has 100k miles already. This is probably going to be a life lesson for me. Going forward, I will never recommend anyone to get a Nissan. I’m going to trade my car for either a Toyota or Mazda. I hate to start making payments again. But I’m done with Nissan.
Dealerships have to go and car makers have to be restrained from building so many hand grenades into their cars making repairs almost impossible to repair.
I am afraid of dealers, and I am staying away from them for my Nissan. That could cause me warranty problems down the line, but I have no trust, especially after reading Yelp reviewers of the dealers in my area.
2007 Nissan Maxima owner here for 14 years, I'm almost at 200k miles. Changed my transmission oil & filter only once at around 110k miles and car is still going strong. I would add another point basically with any other car, don't drive like an asshole on the road. Your car will thank you for it.
Swear most people with car problems dog there cars out and treat them like race cars. (Use to do that) I now baby my car and everything works the way it should for as long as it should
I don't understand why so many people don't like CVT transmissions.... My '10 Nissan Murano which weighs over 4000 lbs (after gas and people are in it) has 201,500 and something miles on it. Original engine AND CVT Transmission (Was a family car untill I bought it from my mother). I've put 85,000 miles on it myself in the few years I've been driving it. We/I haven't had to "Baby it" or anything. It's driven ALOT between highway, interstate and city traffic, I get great gas mileage, (I average 26-28 Mpg using the recommended 93 octane fuel) combined city/highway driving (without AC on, with it on it's 24-26 Mpg). The CVT provides me with plenty of power, and It's still going strong. Just make sure to change your transmission fluid every 30-40k miles and don't drive like a bat out of hell. Nissans aren't bad cars, but CVT's (just like all other transmission types) require routine maintenance like any other car. Parts are made to fail, eventually they will and that's apart of life and that's the risk one takes when buying/using a car.
I went in to get my 60,000 transmission fluid change and the Nissan dealer service writer tried to discourage me from doing it. That is when I looked into it and found out the transmissions were known to fail. In fact I just got my notice from Nissan telling me because of a class action lawsuit I am getting two more years on my warranty (trans only). So if you got a good one great for you.
CVT in my Rogue failed at 79k mi. There are numerous other people with Altimas, Rogues, Sentras etc. that have had a failure at low mileage. Avg. mileage for failure is around 80k. I believe the CVT in the v6 cars uses a chain instead of a belt. This alone means it is less likely to slip. That's why people don't like them. I will never buy another car with a CVT again, especially a Nissan.
@@suzettebeersingh8004 my recommendation is to stay away from the juke unless it is 6 speed manual. CVT's don't like heat, and they generate lots of it. Mine crapped out at low mileage, and was driven mainly in Alabama and Tennessee. Hilly terrain and high speed driving(interstate) also wears them out faster. Mine was 95% highway miles.
I got myself a 2017 sentra and now I’m stuck having to pay for the vehicle that is leading to cvt problems I don’t have enough money for a new transmission it just reached 100k miles and I’m not having any major issues yet but it is somewhat noticeable. When I hit the exit in to the freeway I step on the gas and it takes longer for the car to pick up speed even when I hear the trans shifting it’s still takes a while which pisses people off! I no longer floor it as much to protect it. I’m going to service all maintenance and hopefully new fluids will prolong the life of the transmission wish me luck!
Well I don’t have a Nissan but I couldn’t find any decent info on my Subaru legacy 3.6r and landed on this video. Unfortunately, it shudders and shakes at low speed acceleration. The hotter my transmission fluid gets, it becomes pretty much un-drivable. I’m going to put in the Bar’s Leaks CVT Transmission FIX to see if I can at least get to work and back while my new transmission is being ordered. Thank you for the level of detail and after watching a few of your videos, I’m definitely a subscriber!
Very informative. Just crossed over 250k miles on my 09 Altima today. I only have issues for 2hr plus driving. Which at this point, this car is just for local commute. The qx80 handles out of town/rolling with family duties. I've had the tranny fluid flushed 2-3 times but I hate when it goes limp mode on me. It's not safe and anyone can run you off the road. It's been a good run though. I loved how smoothly it went through the "gears". I miss it already even though it's still here. Just a shell of its former self
@@ramontorres2091 I keep hearing that! Get this though, this is just the 4 cylinder 🤣😂 most people say I wasn't supposed to even get this far without 6 cylinders
It’s not just Nissans that uses Jatco CVTs. It’s also in some Infinitis, Mitsubishis, Jeep Patriot/Compass/Dodge Caliber, Chevy Sparks, Suzuki Kizashis, and Renaults as well.
We had an 2010 Altima. Got rid of it in 2019. The CVT and whole car was great. It had 178,00 miles when we traded it. We purchased a 19 Subaru Forester, We will always remember our Altima as a great car.
Mine was perfect with absolutely no problems at all until exactly 102,000 miles and it’s just went bad out of nowhere and no warnings.. a “quick” trip to the store and that was it. 😭 never again with a Nissan
I have a 2012 Sentra. I drove it from Arizona to Texas and back and just got back yesterday. The check engine light came on about half way through the trip. I had a P0744 code come up when I put my scan tool on it which is a TCC transmission clutch control valve intermittent. I kept driving it and after a few miles the car suddenly had no power. It was like the transmission wouldn’t downshift on hills or maintain speed on cruise control. I’d step on the gas pedal and it wouldn’t accelerate. When I pulled over the transmission was very hot. Wasn’t sure if this was normal? I poured water on the transmission to cool it off and it seemed to work. I drove it again and had no problems for a while; but, the problem returned. Essentially that’s how I got it all the way to Texas and back. I had to pull over and pour water on the transmission every 40 or 50 miles. But driving it through the city I had no problems! I did put some CVT oil in but it didn’t solve the problem. My transmission is overheating? I didn’t know that the transmission had used coolent from the radiator? Wonder if that is the issue and not the TCC? Hummmmmm? 🤔 Good video! Thanks for the info!👍
@@TomasTobiasAliwishesJackson I changed the oil 2 1/2 years ago and that was the second time I’ve done it. So I don’t think that’s the problem. It maybe the filter behind the cooler is dirty. I already ordered a complete aftermarket cooling kit with a new filter, cooler and a radiator cooler to help cool it better. I will replace the CVT oil now because of the overheating……….thanks for the reply. 👍
It's going into limp mode, that's why it wouldn't accelerate when the transmission fluid is too hot. I'd use a scan tool to see the transmission fluid temperature before and after installing the new aftermarket transmission fluid cooler to make sure that it's working and actually cooling down the transmission fluid
best video I have seen on this subject. general speaking if the service interval is every 30k , do a drain fill of cvt fluid every 15k . if the interval is every 60k then do it every 30k. and so on. only use the Nissan Fluid.
We have a 2013 Altima 3.5L. Replaced the first CVT at 50K under warranty. Just had to replace it again at 165K out of pocket. I absolutely love how it drives but it's just not worth it in the long run. Still, paying 7K for a new CVT was cheaper than trading it in and ending up with a 20k-25k new car balance...
The fail-safe issue happened on my 2010 Nissan Rogue at 60k. A transmission cooler fixed it. At 110k, the magnetic shift sensor left me on the side of the road. I had to manually depress the slot switch to unlock the shifter before and a few months after the sensor was replaced. After doing that for 3 weeks, the shifter worked again. At 151k, it seems to slip just after low speed take off, sometimes. I am taking it to the shop. They said 5k to replace the transmission. Hopefully, it will be something simple...
Very well explained. I have a 2016 Murano Platinum with 40,000 miles on it. The CVT just failed this evening. When I started the car and put it in to drive, as soon as I started off after about 10 mph it started to shuttering. There was a wining noise from under the car. I contacted the dealer to make arrangements to pick up the car.
I have a 2013 Rogue with 121,000 miles and started to hear a lighter revving sound with the engine RPM revving sound. RPM’S meter doesn’t go up just a quiet sound and light vibration. No slipping or rough shifting.
Love your information!! I have 2013 NISSAN ALTIMA SL this car never came with a Transmission Stick and now I’m suffering from it.Not sure if my Transmission is out or going out.The delay in shifting of the gears is driving me insane.I was wondering if I flush my Transmission Fluid WILL THAT WORK?? Change out old fluid for new😢😢😢😢HELP
I had my 2007 Altima CVT warranty replaced at 105k miles, and the replacement CVT was dying after 60k with *perfect* maintenance. While I appreciate Nissan replacing the old CVT, there's just no reason why a modern CVT should fail before 200k with routine fluid maintenance under normal driving conditions. For comparison, I have a 2007 Prius CVT with 210k miles on it and the transmission is bulletproof.
Toyotas build their own transmissions Nissan doesn’t and Toyotas have a launch gear so the Cvt it’s self won’t get as much wear and Toyota build great Transmissions and cars
-CVT fluid has to be replaced every 30,000 miles - CVT is very simple but the biggest problem is heating issues from debris accumulation that causes more heat on top of the heat - Toyota belt CVT also has this issue besides the one found in the Prius CVT fluids should be changed every 6 months nd they will last a very long time
That’s great information on CVT,already have an issue with noise,heading to the dealer right now. I just came back from the dealership.My issue turned out to be wheel bearing.Fixed.
I hate CVTs. This video confirms, once you hear a noise in the transmission it's either going to die or will be a costly repair. Just trade, don't repair or replace. Don't but a used CVT auto, you're just getting someone else's problem.
I'm pretty hard on my CVT transmission. I did notice it was slipping a little bit at 35k. Owner's manual i thinks says 60,000 miles before changing ,but did it at 35k instead. Paid Nissan$160 to change the transmission fluid. Made a huge difference, runs like it's new now. And also I just got something in the mail from Nissan saying they're extending the warranty to 84,000 miles for 7 years.
I only changed my coolant twice at 150k and around 290k miles. I change the fluid aroumd every 60k miles but 1 time I changed it at around a 45k mile interval. Im at 312k miles and my cvt works in my 2016 altima.
Here is my experience: I purchased a 2015 Nissan Murano new in July 2015. We had transmission issues starting week 1! Hesitation and then over acceleration were addressed with multiple software tweaks but never corrected the issue. My CVT transmission failed and was replaced under warranty by Nissan in June 2019 at 52,000 miles. Today 11-29-21, at 62,100 miles, my transmission failed again due to the transmission oil/cooler/radiator assembly failing to cause the cooling fluid and the transmission fluid to mix, resulting in having to replace the Transmission, Radiator, and associated assemblies for a cost to me of approximately $6,700! Based on my research, this is a known issue with Nissan CVTs but was only partially addressed in the Class Action lawsuit because individual owners had to personally sue Nissan and their vehicle models and years were the only ones included in the extended warranty. How a judge does not include all Nissan vehicles with the CVT is beyond me especially when my dealership was replacing three a week when my 2015 Murano's CVT was replaced. All my service was completed at the dealership and we never prevent any work from being done when required. The only upside is Nissan is paying for 80% of the repair but I am still paying out of pocket on something I believe should be fully covered. If I had an Altima with the same issue it would be covered under the class action suit extended warranty coverage but the same CVT with known issues in another Nissan model is not covered!
@@omarcrawford66 It all depends. I suggest calling Nissian and have them look up your vehicle VIN and double-check if it is included in the class-action lawsuit extended warranty. This warranty has a time and milage component and Nissan can confirm the status of your vehicle. Good luck.
I have a 2016 Rogue I financed in 2019, I am regular with my oil changes & maintenance but my transmission failed last wk @ only 54 500 miles, Nissan replaced the transmission but I had to pay $300 out of pocket, I seriously don't want it anymore & was looking to trade it in for a new RAV 4, I'm seriously disliking Nissan, I had 08 dodge charger for 11yrs & @ 280000 miles her engine & transmission failed in 2019 so I got rid of her & I kinda regret it.
2012 nissan maxima with 150k miles, no problems with the transmission still drives smooth. Not sure why ppl bash so much on such when alot of times it just how your previous owner drove it, guess i got lucky one!
I hate subscribing to channels but you are humble and honest and I decided to subscribe to your channel for that. I'm sure your channel will take off soon. Good luck.
Honestly best thing I've learned to do with the cvts is install a aftermarket in-line transmission cooler you can cruise at over 100 mph without it going into limp home mode.... only problem is that mine likes to drink cvt fluid lol.
I have a 2013 Nissan Altima with 160,000 miles and still running fine. Sometimes I accelerate a little hard, and some I go up to 120 MPH. I haven't changed the oil on the transmission. I just change the motor oil every 5,000 miles. I went to mechanic school and do all the services myself not once at the dealer, well only at first when I had a free oil change with a free car wash. The problem I had once that make the car shut off and drive very slowly was a dirty throttle body. It took me a while to find out the problem, at first I thought it was the transmission but it wasn't. I just removed the throttle body and clean it with throttle body cleaner, a rag, and sandpaper and that fix my problem. Been running it since then and no problem.
The issue is people don't change the fluid\filter every 30k miles.....And yes these cars have serviceable filters...If you don't the Stepper Motor goes bad...Also the transmission speed sensors go out..... And yes. The number #1 issue I find. They don't service the cooling system...I just fixed one in limp mode. They have green antifreeze in it. And the Stepper motor needs to be replaced..
I just bought a 2007 Nissan Maxima it has the CVT in it. It runs and drives with no problems right now. It has 113,000 miles on it I don’t know if the transmission fluid has ever been changed would it be a good idea to change it? I know on some older transmissions people say not to change it if you have so many miles on it.
Yes change it especially if you got the car as is used. It will help more than hurt it. Transmission fluid changes is something that all car owners should be doing as a regular maintenance but many don't. It is a must in a CVT. I am a 2nd owner of an 2007 Altima currently at 218k. I strive to do regular trans fluid changes and car has been doing well.
Thanks, Man!! You've answered SOOOO many questions for me, and saved me TONS of time!!! (And as a high school Biology teacher off for the summer that is having to work on his lovely bride's busted whip, I have a singular appreciation for every minute you saved me!) Peace out, Bruh- and thanks a METRIC KILOTON!!!
it's not too bad of a video, and the information is something that most people do not think about. One issue with the CVT is power and displacement of the engine. If you get the 3L+ engine or want to tow, stay away as it will immediately overheat the CVT. This transmission wasn't made for towing or medium duty driving, and do not race with the car. You will overheat the transmission/cvt fluit.
I bought a 2012 Nissan Versa used last January. The dealership turned of the check engine light and I payed over 2k just trying to figure out the problem. Turns out my transmission was bad the dealership paid to fix it. It’s not good but it’s better I had no power at first and now I have more but not as much as I’m supposed to. My car jerks sometimes when I stop and go and there’s someone in front of me to where I can get over 20 it will jerk and not stop as well. The rpm will fly up when I press the gas from just coasting. I’m really mad but if it ever goes out I will buy a cheap car too get me by!
I have a 08 Altima 3.5SL. I have the CVT serviced every 60,000 miles. I have 260,000 miles on it, and so far no trouble. Just take care of your car, and it will take care of you.
My 07 had 200,00K but I followed recommended service intervals.
From 2010 to 2016 is the real problem...
Father of Indika damn, I have an all black 2011 Maxima. The paint has corroded in places but the car still runs perfectly. I think I’ll sell it and get the wife a Honda Fit or a Toyota Landcruiser. 😀
See the thing is those limón cars started in late 2012ish my guy not 08
I Have an 07, 250k is when I first experienced limp mode. After much research I put an oil cooler on it. Ran good for a while. Now close to 300k. The whining started Friday, Saturday I had the car towed home. Currently, researching what to do.
Don't have the money for car payments. Hoping to find an honest mechanic who is willing to replace the issue and not the whole CVT. Can't afford that shit either.
I worked for Nissan and own a '13 Versa. Did my trans services every 25-30K miles, and my CVT still died at about 110K.
These transmissions are very known for failure, but they Nissan remanufactured transmissions are rebuilt with the updated parts and we hardly had any issues with them once replaced.
If you notice your cruising RPMs are getting higher than they use to be, it means the trans is starting to go out.
Sometimes it literally depends on the trans, people will still tell you " take care of car and it will take care of you"..had a 13 Altima babied it never went over 80mph n still died at 93,000 bought it at 80,000.. depends on the trans Maxima CVT by far the strongest.
Thank you
💡keep this in mind
@@kingaza7734 you bought it at 80,000miles and babied it to 93,000??? You DO realize someone DIDN'T baby it for 80,000 miles before you. You cant expect the tranny to last long just because you babied it at the end.
I don’t see RPMs going up but if I drive long distances when I push on the gas it won’t accelerate what do you think the problem is. I have a Nissan Sentra 2012 or 200,000 miles
Been there,bought 3 transmissions. Am done with Nissans!
How often were you having the fluid changed?
Me too! I thought they were good vehicles until I bought them
@luyyyu never mattered bro. Because every time I changed the gear box I would obviously change the CVT. Most Nissan models obviously have transmission heating issues, and several motoring agencies recommend installation of gear box coolers
Same, they are shit and have God awful customer service, going to buy Teslas from now on anyways so it does not matter, but I do hope they go bankrupt.
Brought my 1st Nissan Altima and my last...transmission went out .
This was the best video I have seen describing the transmission issues that myself and many others are having right now. And it was definitely tied into a broken radiator that had a slow leak for the longest of time that never produced the puddle on the floor. The car started shuttering and doing crazy things around the 93,000 mile mark (it now has 100k on it).
My mechanic determined that the computer, the ECU unit went bad and I spent $1,000 having that repaired last week... Most of the shaking went away, but then I found out my radiator needed to be repaired which was another $450.
After all that, when I shift into reverse or drive, the car still jumps forward and still makes crazy noises when accelerating and now my mechanic is saying that the transmission is failing and not to waste the money on it.
I will never purchase another Nissan vehicle ever again after this incident. I am driving a 2013 Nissan rogue that was gifted to me from a family member in 2019 and I barely got 5 years out of it..
I poured in a product called lubegard which thickens the viscosity of the new transmission fluid that I put in there which is a CVT transmission fluid, and it is helping a little bit but at this point I am just going to drive this car into the ground.
I'm hoping I can get at least another year or two out of it because I do not have the finances to replace this vehicle and I don't think anyone is going to take this vehicle off my hands with a known transmission issue for a decent price.
I was also under the impression that you never change the transmission fluid, which is clearly not true either and if you look at the manual from the Nissan rogue, you'll see they never mention replacing the transmission fluid either.
This is all the racket and they want your car to fail so you end up purchasing another one sooner than expected.
Lesson learned.
I have 2014 Sentra sr . I bought it yesterday for 1500 with 123k on it. Was driving it home and the speedo goes out. P0500 .. 60 bucks.. I'm seriously thinking of just taking it back and getting my money back.. wyt?
Yup, I had a 99 nissan altima that was a tank... My 2014 nissan altima will be the last altima I'll ever own.
Yup. They say "Lifetime" fluid but what they mean by that is the lifetime of the transmission, NOT the car! So yeah of course the fluid will last the life of the transmission cuz the transmission ain't gonna be doing it's job for to long without maintenance 😅
It's not Just Nissan, alot of manufacturers are pushing "lifetime" fluid. I still tell people to change their trans fluid every 60k ( 30k for a Nissan CVT) especially cuz a lot of modern transmissions no longer have filters you can change.
Just did a CVT fluid and filter change on a Sentra that had 102k miles. The magnetic pickups in the pan were both Bulked up with metal sludge from transmission wear...
I bought Nissan Roque 2017 and I driving 7 years already never got trouble or fix anything just change the oil only and now I plan to buy another Nissan Roque 2024 again because I love Nissan, at least Nissan make by Japan still more better than make in Korea or China or Vietnam.
I am a mechanic and I’ve fixed several whiny rogue transmission by changing the fluid
Awesome
Still failure is imminent.
We have 3- in tha Family 🙄
@@jimmysapien9961 God bless your wallet.
@@jimmysapien9961 2 of 2 at home went south with maintenance at 30k. Get rid of them while they are still running.
Periodic fluid changes, keeping the engine and transmission clean and cool, and not putting excessive stress on the car when driving, like driving it to hard, frequent and quick accelerations from stop or when increasing speed, pulling a trailer, etc... ) are key to the longevity of CVT transmission based vehicles. It is especially imperative for a Nissan Rogue. I have a first generation Rogue from 2011, bought it new at the dealership on Labor Day 2011. Always did my own work on it; it never went to a shop, except for new tire mounting, never had any issue with it other than common wear items, tires, brakes, battery, tune up, fluid changes, etc... Just this past Saturday 10/14/23, the transmission finally went out at 168,500 miles as I was driving about 40 MPH, just casual driving as usual. My rogue was the most dependable car I ever owned up until this past Saturday. Guess I was one of the few fortunate owners whose JATCO transmission lasted that long without having any issues. I've had mechanics tell me they were surprised it was lasting as long as it did, right up to the end. RIP 2011 Nissan Rogue!
Impera what? Oh imperative. Got it.
What were the signs that the transmission actually went bad and not just in "fail safe mode"?
2012 Nissan Quest started failing at 110k miles. At 117k I fixed the problem by getting a Lexus GX. Will never ever buy another Nissan
Bro, Can Lexus gearbox work on Nissan ,Just wanna know.
Can it work
@@integrityhman2856 I think he meant he bought a different car
Did you change the trans fluid when you were supposed to?
Understand your reason I've liked Nissan since the 90s but if I upgrade anytime soon I'm going with Toyota/Lexus products plus Nissan is getting too pricey brand new if they gonna charge 30k for a Altima the transmission shouldn't be going out at all
Reasonable fluid changes and not beating on it has worked for me on a 2010 Maxima and a 2016 Altima. Both into the 150K range with no issues. CVTs don't stand up to abuse and Nissan's lifetime fluid stand (US only) is crazy. I use Castrol CVT fluid in my Nissan and Honda.
😅😅😅😅
Same. 160K on my 2010 Altima SR. Change CVT fluid every 60K. No issues. Maybe mine is not Jacko? Not sure but it runs like a clock.
I use the Castro CVT fluid also. I have been running Trans Tune in it 100 miles or so before change. My 2007 Altima just hit 210,000 and my 2009 Maxima just hit 170,000. No issues besides normal maintenance. Knock on wood. I do oil changes every 3k, and have been doing Transmission every 30k. Overkill I know but it’s easy to do so why not. They both get good gas mileage and were cheap. My son drives the Altima to school and back and my Maxima I take to work etc. great cars. I don’t know if I would ever buy one new though.
2013 murano. My fluid is not discolored but there is some slippage at times. 175k miles but no noises. Not bad but a concern Thoughts are welcome.
I love late model Maximas..... GODDAMN Nissan for these shitty transmissions!!!! SHAME, SHAME, SHAME 😡🤮🤮🤮
This man is describing all the problems I'm having with the only vehicle I have to get around 😔
Tell me about it... Kinda wishing I hadn't watched this video 🤦🏾♂️
@@Tech4Lyfe 😔
Did you ever get your car fixed 😭
@@cheriamor4683 girl, why you crine laughin? 🤔 I don't like det.
@@TamikaX Hell, I wondered the same! Not sure what her intent was but some people use that emoji just for heavy crying, or loudly crying, not 😂 or 🤣
Something that is also available for the nissan jatco transmissions are cvt cooler adapters. The cooler adapter allows you to mount an auxiliary radiator mounted transmissions cooler to your car. It's an upgrade to the system. Also, in my experience with working on these transmissions, changing the fluid at 30k is about right as long as you have a cooler kit set up and do not forget to change out both filters. You have a pan filter and you have a filter behind the stock cooler. People forget about the cooler filter all the time. I also use the Idmitsu NS-2 fluid on these.
My 2013 calls for NS-3 but still does not help with the poor pump design. Nissan got extended warranty but I would not have problems until 20K miles later to reach 100K miles.
One of my relatives has a CVT transmission - and change the oil every 30k miles (including the pan filters) . They don't use it manually either!
Thanks for the info. Where can I get an "auxiliary cooler" and what do they cost..? Also, is it fairly easy to install.... and any idea about labor cost to install..? How much extra does it hold...? Thanks.
@@michealhaskell7258 What do you mean by " don't use it manually"?
@@mm-jx7gf Most auto part stores and online part websites like rockauto is usually the cheapest. Oreilys sells Hayden brand, I got a bypass model as I live in the cold zone, I want to warm up fast not slower by adding additional cooler in the snow. Cold start damage is as bad as overheating. Or you can add additional thermostat to regular cooler.
Just had to have my 2016 Nissan Altima transmission replaced. 60,000 miles. It was starting to slip and jerk during high speeds or when hitting the gas. It was covered by the extended warrenty that Nissan put in place due to this very issue. They replaced the entire transmission at no cost. And I'm glad to see the comments about how the new replacement transmissions are not having so many problems.
I called they said it wasn't covered. Very weird what's happening
My friends 2015 Altima's CVT failed. Nissan said "no" to replacing it under extended warrenty. But yes to a rebuilt $6,200 CVT. My friend is pursuing the complaint strategy to Nissan, BBB, NTSB.
I currently own Nissan Altima 2014 model. It has 230k kms on it. Its a 3.5 SL V6 CVT GCC spec model.
The only issues I had since car being driven this high (mostly highway) and being 8 years old are the following:
1. Shift lock switch failure.
2. Sun visor making fracturing noise.
3. Dash board touch screen stopped working. Have to use buttons to navigate.
Other than that the precautions I regularly take are:
A. change CVT oil every 40k-50k kms to keep it well lubricated.
B. Always change engine oil every 8k-10k kms fully synthetic.
C. Spark plugs every 80k kms.
D. Air filter every 15k kms.
E. Engine coolant every 200k kms.
F. Brake fluid every 80k kms.
G. Power steering fluid every 120k kms.
Lessons learnt:
Don’t follow what dealership is asking you to do.
Follow owners manual for exact details. (Beware owners manual doesnt show when to replace the transmission fluid) dealerships say to never replace it, as it is lifetime oil.
DO NOT LISTEN TO THEM.
For further car details you can subscribe to my youtube channel for specific advise.
Exactly
Going through this shift lock now. Did you buy that part on eBay or let the dealer fix
I bought a Versa new in 2012. Since new, when the car was cold upon first driving, the CVT would make a horrible crunching noise as it transitioned from the low to high speed ratios. Otherwise, it drove fine. Since it was my first CVT car ever, I assumed it was normal. I brought it into the dealership at 30k miles to have the first fluid change. The owner's manual said it could go as long as 60k miles under the normal service schedule. So I felt I was being proactive. The dealership said they didn't change the fluid because their computer said the fluid was still clean and told me to come back at 50k miles. At 38k miles the CVT started slipping, but only during one very specific part of my afternoon commute. Of course, since the issue wasn't always present, the dealership said it was fine. I knew these transmissions are expensive to replace and I wouldn't be able to afford the replacement should it happen, so I sold the car at 56k miles since it was on the verge of running out of warranty at 60k miles. I loved the car, but need a better piece of mind from a more reliable car.
I warned my daughter about this but she is hard headed and now will have to learn the hard way
Same here!
nice i told you so moment
I have a 2015 Altima with 137K miles and zero problems! (so far!)
You should probably buy some lottery tickets 😃 if ur CVT is still alive.
Btw good to know and good luck 👍
@@junaidgt90 145k on my 2013 so far. It may help that my miles are easy with very little city driving...but talking about heat--I live in the Arizona desert with no after market cooler.
How’s the car doing now? I’m planning on trading my pathy in only because I hear high mileage problems with the CTV’s. Right now it’s at 89k miles.
220,000 miles 04 Infiniti i35 original cvt Tran n still pushing change with oem transmission fluid from dealership ever 30k-40k miles
They used to build quality cars, until they let Renalt take over!!!!
Up until 1999, they were Totally Nissan. Then Renault bought part of their stock, and the quality has gone down hill ever since.
audioman628 I read an article that said they were about to go bankrupt over money mismanagement along with making the cars too expensive. So, it was a survival move, but I agree that the brand quality really took a nose dive when they went to Renault.
Renault doesn’t make cvt , trouble is just by nissan
Russell Hancock Nissan is part of an alliance not a merger! Carlos Ghosn was the guy who started to cut costs and everything, Makoto Uchida is saving Nissan he’s putting the money in the quality and innovation.
@@Sevan59 Jatco makes the transmissions, Total junk. They should buy Aisin transmissions wich are 10x better
The funny thing is I just opened a letter from Nissan last night saying I got a warranty extension because of the transmission for 7 years and/or 80k miles. Now this video shows in my feed 😂
I searched my problem on Google search and found your video. I helped your algorithm 😁 by liking the video. Stay happy my friend I appreciate the information in your video you’re very knowledgeable.
I have a 2013 Pathfinder and as of today 168,101 miles with no transmission problems. Thanks to my transmission shop who recommended a tranny service/flush, not just fluid exchange every 30,000 miles this SUV has been working fine except for normal maintenance issues, battery, brakes, etc. Great video with good data.
You really have it good because the 2022 Nissan Pathfinder will come standard with a nine-speed automatic transmission, replacing the previous-generation's CVT.Feb 8,
That’s great to hear ! I also have a 2013 pathfinder with 140k miles but the transmission has never been serviced 😮 my serpentine belt popped recently but other than that no other major issues .
My 2018 Pathfinder has 108,000 miles on it. I replace four quarts of transmission fluid every third oil change. It's a small maintenance step to prevent a huge transmission bill. No issues so far.
And that is what is required, flush and change every 35-45,000 km.
And! use correct, recommended Nissan CVT fluid..
I have a 2013 Nissan Altima 130k miles had her for about 3 years and she hasn’t gave me any problems at all not a single one she’s been very good to me. As long as you take care of your car you should be fine i always make an oil change every 3 months replaced spark plugs replaced belt, new battery terminals transmission fluid flush brake flush. Shocks and struts replaced. As long as you keep up with your maintenance you should be fine
I have an opportunity to buy a 2013 Altima in perfect shape. Dies when you put in gear. Does anyone think it’s the valve body?? A lot of people say valve body and filter
Do you replace the belt the battery terminals, transmission fluid every 3 months as well?
Yep, wish I had done my research before buying my Rogue. CVT failed one month after I bought it. Battled with several leaks in my cooling system, and ultimately had to replace the whole transmission with a rebuilt one that had an improved cooler. Then I battled with getting the transmission fluid level exactly right, because it was still overheating! Eventually I installed a condenser/cooler just like the one you showed and got the transmission fluid just right. It's been a couple years now and everything is working like it should. Surprisingly, the original transmission lasted about 150k miles. On some of these vehicles, the CVT pops after as few as 25-30k miles.
I'm grateful to people like you who make consumers aware of these sorts of problems. Unfortunately, I was screwed as soon as I bought the damn car. Never buying a Nissan again, or any vehicle with a CVT for that matter.
What year was your Rogue? Thinking of getting a 2019 Certified
@@publicemail6518 It was a 2009. I would still avoid, because the CVT problems were present on newer models as well.
@@publicemail6518you better think again! Buyer Beware!
I almost once had my Honda CVT ruined by technician at dealer. He under-filled the fluid below the min mark of dipstick. I drove few km and the humming noise flared up in the cabin. I checked the dipstick and it booms paycheck goofy-ball for dealer. I have bought another bottle of DW1 ATF. The noise is gone. Thank TH-cam mechanic who taught how to check aft fluid in CVT.
In my Versa CVTs I added Hayden intercoolers sized for an RV towing a boat. With filters and a flush, seems to address the root cause
@10:40 I almost guarentee that Nissan would try to blame the CVT failure on the aftermarket cooling system, even if it didn't actually cause the problem. Like insurance companies, car companies will find any reason to try to not honor their warranty. My Nissan dealership tried to say I voided my warranty because I had a bluetooth ODB sensor plugged into the ODB port.
Yeah like covid shots
Another reason for limp mode and transmission overheating is mismatched tire circumferences. My donut spare in the trunk made the transmission overheat, it was not a big deal
How did you fix it hun
I stumbled on this and you NAILED it!! Mine started happening on long trips at least after two hours on the road. It wld do everything you said and drop to 60 mph and I cldnt do anything to fix it. I called Nissan and they acted like they had never heard of this problem. I knew that was wrong because forums were talking about it. Needless to say I cldnt get it fixed at Nissan cause they had know idea. So I took it to another shop and they told me I needed a new
transmission. ($4600😳im not sure it’s even worth doing that..it wld be a CVT again🤦🏼♀️)
At the time I was like what? Well long story short...two years later, I’ve drove it just around town and have 176,000 miles on it. It’s the two door altima....It hasn’t done anything like it use to on the highway but I WONT drive it out of town. I’m thinking it’s time to let her go. I really enjoyed this vehicle!!
You have no idea how happy to hear you say all of this. I knew I wasn’t crazy and tried to explain everything like you did to the dealer... this was a great video. Thank you 🙏
Dealers I swear play dumb especially when you not in warranty. They don't be wanting to fix shit if they don't have too
@@ifoster165 yes they do!!
Thank you!
I have a 2019 Sentra that is at the dealer now being looked at for CVT issues. It has 74,000 miles. The fluid and filters were changed out last October (2022....it is now August 2023 as I write this). The other day it started doing this thing where there is like a momentary hesitation going down the road. It occurs at about 2000rpm between 40 and 60mph. When this happens, I feel a momentary loss of power that lasts 2-3 seconds and the tach goes up to about the 2250rpm mark, then it drops back down. Trying to get out in front of this, I took it to the Nissan dealer first thing yesterday morning. That is when the service rep told me that Nissan knows their CVT is a crap design and that they have extended the transmission warranty from 60,000 to 80,000 miles.
I talked to the service rep a few hours ago and was told that they have been driving and testing it, but it is not kicking out an error code. And if the ECM does not put out an error code, then they cannot make good on the warranty. I will know more later today, but at the moment, I feel that Nissan is likely to be lying to customers and getting out of the expense of issuing a warranty replacement by saying that there is no code.
When's the last time you changed the oil in the CVT?
I came across your video because I have a 2017 Nissan Sentra purchased used from a dealership; it has been making a whining sound on acceleration then recently a jerking sensation. I took it to a Nissan dealership which they diagnosed that the transmission has to be replaced. Your video gave an excellent explanation of what is happening to the CVT trans better than the dealership. Thank you.
*Altima 2007 - present
Maxima 2007 - present
(The JATCO unit that's in the Maxima doesn't have that failure rate, they are the same ones Subaru uses)
I have a 2016 Altima that the CVT is being worked on right now. I am so thankful I have extended Warrenty coverage. I feel like getting an Avalon with a traditional transmission. A car with 63,000 should not need to have replacement parts.
Better ask a lot of questions about what they replace because they put DAMAGED old parts back in mine with warranty and they wont be covered …..so what do you think fails next …the old damaged parts of course which won’t be covered by the repair warranty. Also the service mgr said they replace with USED PARTS not new. So much deceit…
@@carolyngreen5458 We sold that vehicle and replaced it with a Toyota Rav 4. I feel much better getting rid of that Nissan.
Be sure to change your engine coolant and CVT fluid/filter regularly. I do mine every 40k miles on my 07 Maxima.
And your CVT isn’t bad right ?
i change my fluid every weekend
@@realEmjoh I release my fluids every couple days
@@XDMIIIIIIIII 🤤
I have 2016 Versa Note. It just started doing everything you said. 102,000 miles. I had no idea what was going on. It all happened at once. I barely made it home. It's been parked for 10 days.
I had a 09 Versa. 160 000 miles I had a tick just like a lifter. I took it to a Nissan Dealer for fluid change. When it was done I asked what is that noise, he said a lifter. I said wrong side of motor, he said have not heard that before and walked away. Shortly after that a few days it would not pull itself. I called The dealer and Nissan. I was told you need a new CVT not parts for it . It can't be fixed and no warranty. I parked it for 8 years until a friend told me about one he had. He said a $30 step motor from e-bay may fix it. I used his hi priced code reader and it said step motor. I pulled the pan up plugged small motor and 2 bolts. Ordered one and it fixed it. Used old new fluid and old gasket. It works great. Fuel gage stuck at 1/4 . I call that they tried to stick it to me. Try step motor if code comes up as step motor. $30.i sold it no more nissan for me
Sounds like many of these cvt nissan owners don't know much about properly maintaining these vehicles. The cvt is a very sensitive transmission and if you drive it a lot during hot climate and never bother replacing the fluid, it will eventually shudder and vibrate and goes into limp mode. I have a 2010 nissan maxima and drain and fill the tranny fluid every 30K miles and also changed the transmission filter and it has never once let me down or stranded anywhere. Drives and shifts smooth as butter as long as you properly maintain the fluid! My car is at 190K miles now and drives like new! Just drove it from NC to Colorado and back about a month ago and it drove beautifully. In fact...I've taken it on many out of state road trips and never once worried it would leave me stranded.
Honestly thank you so much for this video. This was so helpful in explaining why my car was having issues. The mechanics didn't even tell me this when my car had trouble.
You're welcome
Nissan is JUNK. I also have a Sentra and it is a piece of crap, and the dealership wants to do nothing about it. Nissan has been sued about their transmissions, and mine has multiple other problems including no working AC in Florida. Very expensive work needed and it should just go to the dump. Nissan is a totally and completely irresponsible company and their sales people and their service people are all scammers and liars, and that’s my experience.
@@janetpattison8474 CVT should only be used for what were designed for go card and snowmobiles
Nissan dealers don't even know those exist lol they said no filter in it.
I never knew about CVT transmissions until mine started going out. Now I see why many dealerships have rental Nissans in the parking lot at 40k mileage.
Which car do you have ? I was thinking of buying a 2021 rogue. People say good things about them. Looks like a bad decision
@@manojmohan7264 get a rav4, or find a used RX350 if you want something nicer.
@@jordanmercier3616 nO GOOD, Design flaws--Roof leaks
@@TheMinijacky roof leaks, or engine/transmission failure lol I wonder what's the better choice. I have a GX470, 06, 240,000 miles on it, never had any major issues with it. I have an 02 sequoia with 239,000 miles, never had a major issue with it, just regular maintenance. Toyota makes the best engine/transmission combos in the car industry hands down. There's multiple 2UZ-FE engines with over a million miles on them without a rebuild, how many Nissan's are out there with that mileage, none.
Nissan has been sued about this, unfortunately I bought a car from them and it is a total piece of crap.
I have a 2012 Nissan Sentra with 154,000 miles on it. I bought it brand new from the dealer, so all the miles on the car are mine. I have the receipt for everything ever done to it in a file in the glove box. I don’t babysit the throttle.
I noticed early on the difference in how the CVT transmission drives, especially how it changes gears. I’ve learned over the years to allow the car to properly down shift as I’m coming to a stop. Anyone who has this vehicle knows that when you let off the gas to come to a stop you can feel the car still in gear and at a certain point it will free up and float like it’s in neutral. My experience is to allow the car to get to that neutral point before coming to a complete stop. Whenever I’ve come to a very hard stop it’s like the trans gets jammed up and it takes a half second before you can accelerate again. So, my advice is to allow your car to come to that neutral position before coming to a complete stop, ensuring that you are not coming to a hard/abrupt stop and then not trying to take off too fast after the stop. Basically, even though this little car can zip, it’s not a race car.
Also, every car needs a good two hour drive at highway speed every few months or so just to blow the dust off the engine. Whenever I make a trip from Houston to Austin and back, my engine always runs super smooth.
Best of luck all! ✨👌🏾
Very good advice
Do you still have the sentra?
I ended up filing a case with nissan headquarters and the ntsa for the transmission. I bought my car in 2015 with only 20k miles or so on the dash. After 5 yrs clunk. They already had a hood latch recall( it actually flunk open driving down a highway) a computer reset recall,and that issue. I stated that claim about the warranty cut off because they knew that system had issues. I actually won, but wasnt satisfactory to my liking enough. 2500 repair and 3 day new car rental..I wanted 100%
Nissan CVT Transmissions have been failing through out the model lines for several year models. Models like Altima, Versa, Sentra, Juke, Rogue, Pathfinder, Murano all have the same issues. Many develop a “shudder”, “Judder” or “vibration” as described by many owners and used car dealers. The Jilcat Proline CVT Supplement has stopped the shudder repeatedly all across the country for most of the applications it has been applied.
There is a separate Torque Converter issue (Code P0074 or P0075) that is different from the shudder. It actually feels like a stall when you stop and the vehicle has issues at take off. This would require a flush process and refill with OEM fluid. We have found by adding 2 bottles of Jilcat CVT Supplement in with the fresh fluid we have cleared up that problem in many cases. There is NO GUARANTEE the Jilcat Product will work but in almost every attempt we have seen success. Try this before you spend $2000 or $3000 replacing the transmission. th-cam.com/video/mM-nkoWUfk0/w-d-xo.html
[Nissan vibrates] [CVT issues] [why does my Altima shake] [what can I do about my Murano vibrating when I drive] [Murano transmission issue] [Rogue transmission vibration] [Juke has a vibration] [additive to help Nissan CVT] [how to fix my Pathfinder transmission] Check it out the CVT fix here: under $50! www.jilcat.com/product/cvt-transmission-supplement-1-bottle-35-dont-replace-that-nissan-cvt/
First video I’ve seen about this issue that addressed the issue and what you need to do to get it fixed. Great video!
For Altima, do all you can to limit/ lower heat, includes minimum coolant-water ratio, 30k change both filters, best cvt fluid, seal the too-leaky cooling plenum, keep radiators clean...I found this to be enough for Mojave hard and hot conditions now 209k.
Filters ? Where ?
How often do I change the coolant?
@@ANGELPR25 Around 30000.
Best thing to do is buy a Toyota Camry that doesn't have a CVT.
@@josephkelleher8820 What are the best years/today's value-for-$ for Camry?
My 2016 Altima SR is running like new going on 68,000 miles. No CVT failures or issues. The only thing I had replaced were getting new brakes and rotors, and battery since purchasing the car in 2016.
Hey Marv, I have the exact same year and model. Thing has been flawless besides an over tightened battery bracket. Which cracked the case after the first year. All I've ever done besides that is breaks oil and tires. Well today at 110,000 I'm shuddering. Luckily I was 3 blocks from my house and babied it home. Today is also the first time of hearing about the class action lawsuit against Nissan transmissions. It was a garbage from day one and they knew it. Shame everything else has been solid, I have been nothing but praising it. Three more payments left. So much for enjoy life without a loan. I'm not dropping 3 to 5 grand on it for a new garbage trany. Also never buying anything Nissan again
I’m at 45 k miles and it’s loosing power it does not properly accelerate from a red light just sounds loud
i've been looking into this a lot as I have two daughters with Nissan. It's not cheap, but seems to be the best fluid on the market, does not void warranty, etc AMSOIL CVT fluid.
I plan on doing cooling/auxiliary filter change, drain and refill on my daughters cars.
I have 2010 maxima with 205 000 miles on original cvt transmission still running strong. I think not hot rodding it is the reason for it lasting plus I use Amsoil cvt fluid
I think the problem with cvts is mainly due to the small beehive cooler / heat exchanger that is fitted onto the unit being inefficient at cooling the fluid. I think if they ran the lines through the lower radiator tank (concentric oil cooler) it would be better
Very logical and you address almost every Nissan CVT transmission issues. Great insight and keep it up your good work man! 👍😁
Thanks
Very informational video! The first point would cause more cold start damage if you live in the cold winter in the northern as adding regular transmission cooler would cause more damage for sure if CVT fluid is not warm enough before aggressive acceleration, bypass cooler or adding additional thermostat would be good in both worlds.
As for the second point, someone in the comment section did CVT fluid change every 25K miles but still failed at 110K miles so make sure the paper cartridge cooler filter after taking off wheel liner on driver's side is also changed to prevent clogging. I want to add fifthly, drop the transmission pan and change the metal mesh filter housing and nitrile rubber O ring with the paper cartridge cooler filter, o ring is the key of shifting bad as it's how filter looses suction from bottom of the transmission pan, while dropping the pan, I would advise to clean metal shavings on two magnets and I just added a third one, I have heard people added three more magnets even. My dealer said there is no filters so they only used exchange machine to change 5 qt last time without changing the paper filter and reprogrammed CVT under free recall at 43K miles, I am doing it by myself this time with Idemitsu N3 fluid at 80K miles. Sixth would be never rev over 2000 rpm or even 1500 rpm before CVT fluid temperature warms up to 40C/104F according to CVTz50 app but I believe it should be even 45C/113F, IMO, at least 35C/95F, as repair manual says fluid change between 35C/95F and 45/113F. It's also the temperature for fluid change. Nissan has cold start protection in TCM anyways tho. I am lucky to live 10 minutes away from freeway entrance before reving up with cruise control to help acceleration to 65 mph, Recently, I have been monitoring temperature of CVT and engine for each drive, this makes car driving like a lab test now. FYI, I am a former engineering student liking to rebuild my cars and help fixing other people's car. Oh the seventhly, turning on rear window defroster will reduce horsepower and cause vibration somehow on my 2013 Versa, worn or over tightening or cold & hard squeaking serpentine belt can also affect acceleration, Nissan/Jatco made most sensitive transmissions but I heard Jatco 2022 CVT-X (JF022E) is finally redesigned better, we will see comparing to Toyota's latest Aisin CVT. It should be better than CVT-7 and CVT-8. It's used on Qashqai in Europe since June 2021already.
I was thinking of adding more magnets but didn't know if it would cause problems
@@denisekoenig9479 t
Family member had an accident and looking for a car. I said DO NOT BUY A NISSAN PERIOD. “Look at my new car!” O no🤦🏾♂️. Thanks for the information. I can help a lot of my family and friends who have Nissans. My 2013 sentra transmission went out just after 60k . Of course just out of factory warranty. Thanks You so much for this video.
This was the perfect explanation for my 2015 Nissan Altima. It starting to take a few seconds to shift into drive and reverse.
Yesterday I receive a letter from Nissan saying that my car transmission is extended to ...7 years or 84.000 miles .Whatever come first .
I have 2016 Altima , with 28.000 miles , and so far I don't have any problems with the car. Drives beautiful , and I hope continues the same way.
I also drive moderate , not crazy speed driving in the highway !!!.....Nice and easy !!!
Oh my Nissan problems with the transmission and other stuff like the AC unit, & rubber on the car started around 25K. I also have a Honda and the rubber is in great shape, the AC still works, etc… & the SUV is a 2010. With low mileage. I’d never buy Nissan again, it’s a total piece of garbage car that belongs in the dump.
any pile of junk should last 28k miles if driven lightly, back in the model t days they might not expected much better
I bought an '07 Murano with 41,000 miles. It didn't make it to 42K. Three dealerships said these transmissions are NEVER repaired, and repair parts are not available. The dealership I bought it from ghosted me. All that was available at the dealerships were factory rebuilt units, and they wanted $9500 for it. Aamco did it for $5400. Nissan warrants theirs for 12 months, 12000 miles. Aamco warrants theirs for 30 months, 60000 miles. My last vehicle was a Nissan Frontier with 4 catalytic converters; all four were wreckled at the same time by a computer glitch at 100,000 miles, which Nissan admitted, but took no responsibility for. I WILL NEVER BUY ANOTHER NISSAN!!!
Hi i have a 07 pathfinder has over 200 thousand miles. My transmission fluid is clear and smells like raid bug spray. Drives real smooth.
07 pathfinder isn`t equiped with cvt. it has usual automatic transmission:))
My transmission was going bad so I jacked up the nissan up high nd I put it I. Reverse for 5 minutes .. by doing that i drove the nissan Nd till now not had a problem ..I still haven't did no tune up on the transmission.. I had problems at 200k since I drove it in Reverse it running just fine at 225k.. your video are very good.. keep up the good work
Before giving up on the trans, do back to back transmission cvt fluid changes and fitting a cvt oil cooler. 2015 Altima 295,000 km.
The video was very imformative and you point out the problems these vehicles are experiencing. It helps us to identify and send back comments for advise. Thanks again.
Thank you for your support!
@@WrenchLink thanks . After my fluid ( expensive factory type)was changed on my 2007 Nissan x-trail . The winnings has started 4 months later . Should I change fluid again and filter?
@@WrenchLink Hey I was hoping for some advice from you. My sentra 09 base 2.0 with 170k miles started jerking hard when accelerating between 20-40 mph and especially after driving for a long period. I'm going to get it checked at the dealer and see what they say but I was wondering if you thought a transmission cooler would help me out and if you could recommend one.
I've noticed after driving about 75 miles in one day, the engine RPM on my Nissan Murano nearly doubles from around 2000 RPM to about 3500 RPM at around 60 MPH.
The Rogue transmission began to go when it was at 65 mph, and the transmission got hot. It has a leak. Trying to find how to replace the vent hose. Transmission fluid was all over the top of the engine burning fumes into the car.
Which is why I'm here. But the rpm should not increase that much.
Avoid buying a Nissan or Mitsubishi with a JATCO built CVT. They have terrible resale value. Buy a Toyota or a Kia.... seriously. Buy an aftermarket transmission cooler and change CVT fluid with the Nissan recommended type AND FILTERS (theres 2 filters) every 25-30,000 miles. Also make sure the CVT fluid fill plug is in its place. As the CVT fluid heats it obviously expands. This literally can cause the plugs to be popped out by the pressure build up.
I'm a rideshare driver w/ a 2016 Altima. For me, it's Service the fluid @ every 4 oil Changes (24K Mi). It holds up well on this schedule.
I'm also in TX. and the CVT has a cooler.
CVT Sucks and Nissan too..... I've ad 2 transmissions and still Nissan did not support me. Thank you for the help full information. i wish you continued success with your business. God Bless
Very informative. The CVT was replaced on my 2016 Sentra by Nissan at 27,000 miles. Not to long ago my vehicle started making the humming/ howling/ whining sound when acceleration past 30mph. I had a feeling it could be related to CVT. 🤦🏻♂️ I just passed 40,000 miles too. Anyways, I told my Nissan dealership/service department about it but they said they couldn’t replicate the issue. 😏 Here’s the thing. I’ve had a lot of warranty work done on my car from Factory Warranty to my Nissan Extended Warranty Coverage. I’ve kept up with all the basic maintenance services recommended by Nissan and more. I even went with the premium services that the owners service manual recommended for better vehicle performance. No one has worked on my car besides my Nissan dealership. I’ve had power train issues, control arm rod crankshaft replacements, Factory stereo replaced, whole A/C system replacement, 2 additional A/C Blower Motor replacements, CVT replacement, and a whole lot more. I’ve come to the conclusion that it’s either 1 of 3 things. One it’s the technicians and service advisors who are purposely messing up my Sentra to make commission money off of the extended warranty coverage pay out. Two it’s that the service technicians are just idiots who have little knowledge of their trade with only one master technician teaching them a little bit of the trade. The most basic stuff and they still mess it up. Or it’s both. 😒 I think my own Nissan Dealership made it a Lemon. They set me up for the Lemon Law route. 🤷🏻♂️
@Adam B ❤️❤️❤️👍🏼👍🏼✊🏼🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
I’m going through a very similar situation with my 2018 Versa note with the exception of tranny being replaced. I live out here in Guam so I’m probably thinking it’s just the workmanship of the vehicles themselves. I just made 35k miles. This will be my last year for the powertrain warranty. I could either purchase an additional 2 year powertrain warranty for $2500 or trade it in for a new car.
This really bites because I just paid it off last year and the car is acting like it has 100k miles already.
This is probably going to be a life lesson for me. Going forward, I will never recommend anyone to get a Nissan. I’m going to trade my car for either a Toyota or Mazda. I hate to start making payments again. But I’m done with Nissan.
I think you are absolutely right . . . no doubt in my mind. Seen it too many times.
In most cases you are not dealing with normal people.
Dealerships have to go and car makers have to be restrained from building so many hand grenades into their cars making repairs almost impossible to repair.
I am afraid of dealers, and I am staying away from them for my Nissan. That could cause me warranty problems down the line, but I have no trust, especially after reading Yelp reviewers of the dealers in my area.
2007 Nissan Maxima owner here for 14 years, I'm almost at 200k miles. Changed my transmission oil & filter only once at around 110k miles and car is still going strong.
I would add another point basically with any other car, don't drive like an
asshole on the road. Your car will thank you for it.
Hello? Exactly
Swear most people with car problems dog there cars out and treat them like race cars. (Use to do that) I now baby my car and everything works the way it should for as long as it should
I don't understand why so many people don't like CVT transmissions.... My '10 Nissan Murano which weighs over 4000 lbs (after gas and people are in it) has 201,500 and something miles on it. Original engine AND CVT Transmission (Was a family car untill I bought it from my mother). I've put 85,000 miles on it myself in the few years I've been driving it. We/I haven't had to "Baby it" or anything. It's driven ALOT between highway, interstate and city traffic, I get great gas mileage, (I average 26-28 Mpg using the recommended 93 octane fuel) combined city/highway driving (without AC on, with it on it's 24-26 Mpg). The CVT provides me with plenty of power, and It's still going strong. Just make sure to change your transmission fluid every 30-40k miles and don't drive like a bat out of hell. Nissans aren't bad cars, but CVT's (just like all other transmission types) require routine maintenance like any other car. Parts are made to fail, eventually they will and that's apart of life and that's the risk one takes when buying/using a car.
Thanks i can have a sound sleep,
I have driven for 30000kms no problems till now
I went in to get my 60,000 transmission fluid change and the Nissan dealer service writer tried to discourage me from doing it. That is when I looked into it and found out the transmissions were known to fail. In fact I just got my notice from Nissan telling me because of a class action lawsuit I am getting two more years on my warranty (trans only). So if you got a good one great for you.
CVT in my Rogue failed at 79k mi. There are numerous other people with Altimas, Rogues, Sentras etc. that have had a failure at low mileage. Avg. mileage for failure is around 80k. I believe the CVT in the v6 cars uses a chain instead of a belt. This alone means it is less likely to slip. That's why people don't like them. I will never buy another car with a CVT again, especially a Nissan.
But do you live in a high temp area like Nevada?. Going to look at a Juke tomorrow, and it gets hot here in southern Utah.
@@suzettebeersingh8004 my recommendation is to stay away from the juke unless it is 6 speed manual. CVT's don't like heat, and they generate lots of it. Mine crapped out at low mileage, and was driven mainly in Alabama and Tennessee. Hilly terrain and high speed driving(interstate) also wears them out faster. Mine was 95% highway miles.
I got myself a 2017 sentra and now I’m stuck having to pay for the vehicle that is leading to cvt problems I don’t have enough money for a new transmission it just reached 100k miles and I’m not having any major issues yet but it is somewhat noticeable. When I hit the exit in to the freeway I step on the gas and it takes longer for the car to pick up speed even when I hear the trans shifting it’s still takes a while which pisses people off! I no longer floor it as much to protect it. I’m going to service all maintenance and hopefully new fluids will prolong the life of the transmission wish me luck!
Well I don’t have a Nissan but I couldn’t find any decent info on my Subaru legacy 3.6r and landed on this video. Unfortunately, it shudders and shakes at low speed acceleration. The hotter my transmission fluid gets, it becomes pretty much un-drivable. I’m going to put in the Bar’s Leaks CVT Transmission FIX to see if I can at least get to work and back while my new transmission is being ordered.
Thank you for the level of detail and after watching a few of your videos, I’m definitely a subscriber!
Very informative.
Just crossed over 250k miles on my 09 Altima today. I only have issues for 2hr plus driving. Which at this point, this car is just for local commute. The qx80 handles out of town/rolling with family duties.
I've had the tranny fluid flushed 2-3 times but I hate when it goes limp mode on me. It's not safe and anyone can run you off the road. It's been a good run though. I loved how smoothly it went through the "gears". I miss it already even though it's still here. Just a shell of its former self
250k miles ! Dammmm you should be happy it even lasted that long
@@ramontorres2091 I keep hearing that! Get this though, this is just the 4 cylinder 🤣😂 most people say I wasn't supposed to even get this far without 6 cylinders
It’s not just Nissans that uses Jatco CVTs. It’s also in some Infinitis, Mitsubishis, Jeep Patriot/Compass/Dodge Caliber, Chevy Sparks, Suzuki Kizashis, and Renaults as well.
Thank you for saying this they are the biggest makers of all CVT’s. People always think Nissan because they created the technology!!!
@@dots3280 also nissan owns a very large stake in Jatco.
Pete Bailey Subaru’s don’t use jatco. They have their own cvts that are chain driven as oppose to steel belt driven as in Jatcos
You just named the most crappie cars!
Well If we talk of nissan and Renault we are talking about the same shit crap money pit
I have a 2010 Altima, I replaced the fluid when it had 60k. So far, running like a champ. 98k miles on it now.
We had an 2010 Altima. Got rid of it in 2019. The CVT and whole car was great. It had 178,00 miles when we traded it. We purchased a 19 Subaru Forester, We will always remember our Altima as a great car.
We never changes the fluid in the CVT on that car.
Mine was perfect with absolutely no problems at all until exactly 102,000 miles and it’s just went bad out of nowhere and no warnings.. a “quick” trip to the store and that was it. 😭 never again with a Nissan
@@ciaralovebug360 I'm crossing my fingers...102k right now... 😨😬
I have a Nissan CVT transmission and have no problem is don't let these people try to scare you
I have a 2012 Sentra. I drove it from Arizona to Texas and back and just got back yesterday. The check engine light came on about half way through the trip. I had a P0744 code come up when I put my scan tool on it which is a TCC transmission clutch control valve intermittent. I kept driving it and after a few miles the car suddenly had no power. It was like the transmission wouldn’t downshift on hills or maintain speed on cruise control. I’d step on the gas pedal and it wouldn’t accelerate. When I pulled over the transmission was very hot. Wasn’t sure if this was normal? I poured water on the transmission to cool it off and it seemed to work. I drove it again and had no problems for a while; but, the problem returned. Essentially that’s how I got it all the way to Texas and back. I had to pull over and pour water on the transmission every 40 or 50 miles. But driving it through the city I had no problems! I did put some CVT oil in but it didn’t solve the problem. My transmission is overheating? I didn’t know that the transmission had used coolent from the radiator? Wonder if that is the issue and not the TCC? Hummmmmm? 🤔
Good video! Thanks for the info!👍
Change the CVT fluid.
@@TomasTobiasAliwishesJackson I changed the oil 2 1/2 years ago and that was the second time I’ve done it. So I don’t think that’s the problem. It maybe the filter behind the cooler is dirty. I already ordered a complete aftermarket cooling kit with a new filter, cooler and a radiator cooler to help cool it better. I will replace the CVT oil now because of the overheating……….thanks for the reply. 👍
It's going into limp mode, that's why it wouldn't accelerate when the transmission fluid is too hot.
I'd use a scan tool to see the transmission fluid temperature before and after installing the new aftermarket transmission fluid cooler to make sure that it's working and actually cooling down the transmission fluid
@@WrenchLink yep? I figured it out. It’s been flushed, filters replaced and everything done to the transmission. It works fine now.👍
best video I have seen on this subject. general speaking if the service interval is every 30k , do a drain fill of cvt fluid every 15k . if the interval is every 60k then do it every 30k. and so on. only use the Nissan Fluid.
I just retired my '07 Nissan versa with 298,200 miles on a CVT and now I'm in a 2019 Maxima if you drive the cvts right they'll last a long time
What was your maintenance like? Do anything special?
@@Ghost-jy9hk need to take care of your trans, change the trans fluid and fluid filter
What do you do ? I like the 2021 rogue so much. But these comments are killing me
That is a fluke.
07 Versa did not have a CVT
We have a 2013 Altima 3.5L. Replaced the first CVT at 50K under warranty. Just had to replace it again at 165K out of pocket. I absolutely love how it drives but it's just not worth it in the long run. Still, paying 7K for a new CVT was cheaper than trading it in and ending up with a 20k-25k new car balance...
I almost bought a Nissan Altima 5 years ago But after researching about the CVT, crossed it off my list and got a V6 Accord instead
Smart move!
I have a 2017 nissan truck and a 2019 Nissan Maxima SR and I love both. I haven’t had 1 bit of trouble with either.
The fail-safe issue happened on my 2010 Nissan Rogue at 60k. A transmission cooler fixed it. At 110k, the magnetic shift sensor left me on the side of the road. I had to manually depress the slot switch to unlock the shifter before and a few months after the sensor was replaced. After doing that for 3 weeks, the shifter worked again. At 151k, it seems to slip just after low speed take off, sometimes. I am taking it to the shop. They said 5k to replace the transmission. Hopefully, it will be something simple...
I sure wish I knew this man personally, I could really use some help and we have absolutely no mechanics in this town at all!
Notice he didn't say anything about actually being able to fix it...? Only, to change the fluid every 50,000 miles...
I saw on another youtube channel the mechanic says you cant even rebuild them. New one $5-6000 to replace..
230k trouble free miles on our 2011 Murano. Transmission is fine. The 2011 is the last year they were built in Japan though.
2011 max ...180,000 no problems .
2013 max sv 125,000 miles no issues...just basic wear and tear and it get replace when I noticed anything...love my Maxima
Oh... I didn't know 2011 was built in China, I would have to get the ok from scotty Kilmer before I buy one..
Design problems. It will eventually go
@@ontarioman6301 I hope
Very well explained. I have a 2016 Murano Platinum with 40,000 miles on it. The CVT just failed this evening. When I started the car and put it in to drive, as soon as I started off after about 10 mph it started to shuttering. There was a wining noise from under the car. I contacted the dealer to make arrangements to pick up the car.
Did they replace the trans?
Will they replace the Transmission?
I got the same issue on my Nissan Altima 2016 SV
@@donjuanjo1000 same deal with me, but it’s a 2015 with 77,000 miles
I have a 2013 Rogue with 121,000 miles and started to hear a lighter revving sound with the engine RPM revving sound. RPM’S meter doesn’t go up just a quiet sound and light vibration. No slipping or rough shifting.
Love your information!! I have 2013 NISSAN ALTIMA SL this car never came with a Transmission Stick and now I’m suffering from it.Not sure if my Transmission is out or going out.The delay in shifting of the gears is driving me insane.I was wondering if I flush my Transmission Fluid WILL THAT WORK?? Change out old fluid for new😢😢😢😢HELP
I had my 2007 Altima CVT warranty replaced at 105k miles, and the replacement CVT was dying after 60k with *perfect* maintenance. While I appreciate Nissan replacing the old CVT, there's just no reason why a modern CVT should fail before 200k with routine fluid maintenance under normal driving conditions. For comparison, I have a 2007 Prius CVT with 210k miles on it and the transmission is bulletproof.
Toyotas build their own transmissions Nissan doesn’t and Toyotas have a launch gear so the Cvt it’s self won’t get as much wear and Toyota build great Transmissions and cars
@@Arelius_02 Cool! Thanks for the info!
-CVT fluid has to be replaced every 30,000 miles
- CVT is very simple but the biggest problem is heating issues from debris accumulation that causes more heat on top of the heat
- Toyota belt CVT also has this issue besides the one found in the Prius
CVT fluids should be changed every 6 months nd they will last a very long time
That’s great information on CVT,already have an issue with noise,heading to the dealer right now.
I just came back from the dealership.My issue turned out to be wheel bearing.Fixed.
I am on third Altima just traded a 2012 with 175k never a problem. Love my 2023 so far, only had it three weeks. Still have a 2014 as well.
I hate CVTs. This video confirms, once you hear a noise in the transmission it's either going to die or will be a costly repair. Just trade, don't repair or replace. Don't but a used CVT auto, you're just getting someone else's problem.
I'm pretty hard on my CVT transmission. I did notice it was slipping a little bit at 35k. Owner's manual i thinks says 60,000 miles before changing ,but did it at 35k instead. Paid Nissan$160 to change the transmission fluid. Made a huge difference, runs like it's new now. And also I just got something in the mail from Nissan saying they're extending the warranty to 84,000 miles for 7 years.
I got a 2007 I still need to know 2.5 S does That's mean AT light is the transmissions
$160 is cheap, They wanted $290 and then told me it was $390, worth it but would never pay that price again, will not own any vehicle with CVT.
I only changed my coolant twice at 150k and around 290k miles. I change the fluid aroumd every 60k miles but 1 time I changed it at around a 45k mile interval. Im at 312k miles and my cvt works in my 2016 altima.
Coolant is usually good for 5 years or 60 k miles. Nissan CVT fluid every 30 k if mostly city driven.
@G Pac lmfao! No. Driving in nyc and the surrounding counties over and over again
Here is my experience: I purchased a 2015 Nissan Murano new in July 2015. We had transmission issues starting week 1! Hesitation and then over acceleration were addressed with multiple software tweaks but never corrected the issue. My CVT transmission failed and was replaced under warranty by Nissan in June 2019 at 52,000 miles. Today 11-29-21, at 62,100 miles, my transmission failed again due to the transmission oil/cooler/radiator assembly failing to cause the cooling fluid and the transmission fluid to mix, resulting in having to replace the Transmission, Radiator, and associated assemblies for a cost to me of approximately $6,700! Based on my research, this is a known issue with Nissan CVTs but was only partially addressed in the Class Action lawsuit because individual owners had to personally sue Nissan and their vehicle models and years were the only ones included in the extended warranty. How a judge does not include all Nissan vehicles with the CVT is beyond me especially when my dealership was replacing three a week when my 2015 Murano's CVT was replaced. All my service was completed at the dealership and we never prevent any work from being done when required. The only upside is Nissan is paying for 80% of the repair but I am still paying out of pocket on something I believe should be fully covered. If I had an Altima with the same issue it would be covered under the class action suit extended warranty coverage but the same CVT with known issues in another Nissan model is not covered!
crap. i feel like this is my fate. my cvt failed first year. and now my warranty just ended
oh i have a nissan altima 2015. so they will fix transmission for free?
@@omarcrawford66 It all depends. I suggest calling Nissian and have them look up your vehicle VIN and double-check if it is included in the class-action lawsuit extended warranty. This warranty has a time and milage component and Nissan can confirm the status of your vehicle. Good luck.
I have a 2016 Rogue I financed in 2019, I am regular with my oil changes & maintenance but my transmission failed last wk @ only 54 500 miles, Nissan replaced the transmission but I had to pay $300 out of pocket, I seriously don't want it anymore & was looking to trade it in for a new RAV 4, I'm seriously disliking Nissan, I had 08 dodge charger for 11yrs & @ 280000 miles her engine & transmission failed in 2019 so I got rid of her & I kinda regret it.
@@darkphoenix4441 I am sorry to hear this do not understand how Nissian can continue to get away with this!
That fluid is really thin too when it is warm. If you drained it warm it flows like water. It is also not thick when it is cold really.
2012 nissan maxima with 150k miles, no problems with the transmission still drives smooth. Not sure why ppl bash so much on such when alot of times it just how your previous owner drove it, guess i got lucky one!
I hate subscribing to channels but you are humble and honest and I decided to subscribe to your channel for that. I'm sure your channel will take off soon. Good luck.
Thank you so much for supporting my channel!
I’ll give it some thought
What about, when you shift it into gear. The links work and shift in the transmission, but you move. Feels like your in N in any gear.
When it’s stalls ?
So should I install an aftermarket trans cooler ?, I think it will reduce the heat but there are still issues such as defective bearings.
Aftermarket trans cooler would help, it wouldn't fix the problem entirely
@@WrenchLink Can you recommend a cooler with web link, please?
@@robbdudeson346 so trans cooler, trans filter & fluid would work ??? Do you recommend i do that ?? Same symptoms is happening to me
Honestly best thing I've learned to do with the cvts is install a aftermarket in-line transmission cooler you can cruise at over 100 mph without it going into limp home mode.... only problem is that mine likes to drink cvt fluid lol.
I have a 2013 Nissan Altima with 160,000 miles and still running fine. Sometimes I accelerate a little hard, and some I go up to 120 MPH. I haven't changed the oil on the transmission. I just change the motor oil every 5,000 miles. I went to mechanic school and do all the services myself not once at the dealer, well only at first when I had a free oil change with a free car wash. The problem I had once that make the car shut off and drive very slowly was a dirty throttle body. It took me a while to find out the problem, at first I thought it was the transmission but it wasn't. I just removed the throttle body and clean it with throttle body cleaner, a rag, and sandpaper and that fix my problem. Been running it since then and no problem.
The issue is people don't change the fluid\filter every 30k miles.....And yes these cars have serviceable filters...If you don't the Stepper Motor goes bad...Also the transmission speed sensors go out.....
And yes. The number #1 issue I find. They don't service the cooling system...I just fixed one in limp mode. They have green antifreeze in it. And the Stepper motor needs to be replaced..
I just bought a 2007 Nissan Maxima it has the CVT in it. It runs and drives with no problems right now. It has 113,000 miles on it I don’t know if the transmission fluid has ever been changed would it be a good idea to change it? I know on some older transmissions people say not to change it if you have so many miles on it.
I would say change it. The "older transmission people" are talking about traditional transmissions, not CVT's.
Thank you
Yes change it especially if you got the car as is used. It will help more than hurt it. Transmission fluid changes is something that all car owners should be doing as a regular maintenance but many don't. It is a must in a CVT. I am a 2nd owner of an 2007 Altima currently at 218k. I strive to do regular trans fluid changes and car has been doing well.
Thanks, Man!! You've answered SOOOO many questions for me, and saved me TONS of time!!! (And as a high school Biology teacher off for the summer that is having to work on his lovely bride's busted whip, I have a singular appreciation for every minute you saved me!)
Peace out, Bruh- and thanks a METRIC KILOTON!!!
it's not too bad of a video, and the information is something that most people do not think about. One issue with the CVT is power and displacement of the engine. If you get the 3L+ engine or want to tow, stay away as it will immediately overheat the CVT. This transmission wasn't made for towing or medium duty driving, and do not race with the car. You will overheat the transmission/cvt fluit.
I bought a 2012 Nissan Versa used last January. The dealership turned of the check engine light and I payed over 2k just trying to figure out the problem. Turns out my transmission was bad the dealership paid to fix it. It’s not good but it’s better I had no power at first and now I have more but not as much as I’m supposed to. My car jerks sometimes when I stop and go and there’s someone in front of me to where I can get over 20 it will jerk and not stop as well. The rpm will fly up when I press the gas from just coasting. I’m really mad but if it ever goes out I will buy a cheap car too get me by!