I just finished up doing this…oh boy was it a doozy to do the filter! A bit of advice for anyone doing it yourself: -it’s easier to remove the filter with the hoses still attached, then remove the hoses once the filter is out of the car and stick ‘em on the new filter -if you have a Jack and Jack stands, use them and go in from under the car to access the bottom of the filter, that way you can actually see what you’re doing. -patience is key with this one. Took me about 2.5 hours
Wow thank god for the Japanese right? That's some good design. Most cars make you remove the pan just to drain the fluid, as well as replace the filter. Honda really makes maintenance so easy.
If you do a drain and fill transmission fluid change, you'll only get out about a third of the fluid each time, so usually people do at least 3 drain and fills to get most of the fluid out. If you're doing it that way, might as well change the filter on your 3rd fluid change since most of the fluid will be new by now.
@@2carpros I bought a used 09 Civic last year at 99,000km it's now at 129,000km. Should I change the transmission fluid or should I wait for the code to appear on the display? Thanks
Do you have a part number on the washer for the drain plug? Im assuming its different that the oil drain plug washer, and I can't find the thing unless Im buying a new drain plug.
i bought a drain plug washer for my oil changed and i thought on the product name it said for both so they might be the same washer. idk tho i’ll try to find the place i found it
I don't mean this to sound so snarky, but it was really satisfying to watch y'all struggle with that damn air box. I was like: ah, even the pros struggled with such a simple piece, I now feel better about how long it took me to get it in 😂😂
Any advice of removing the drain plug? Mines on there super tight, can't get it off with a ½ratchet(with adapter) and yanking the ratchet with a hammer as a hook on the ratchet
Great video, I recently purchased a 2009 civic with 21,000 miles from the 93 year old original owner. Other than a new alternator, battery, and belt it’s completely stock, what if anything should I do as far as maintenance is concerned? Other than the air and cabin filter? Please include the part numbers for the Transmisión filter, and drain plug washer as well. Thank you…
If its completely stock, well maintained by previous owner, and only 21k miles, you got a car that will last you a crazy long time if you continue to maintain it properly. I would check the owners manual to see the recommendations for maintenance. It will show you what you need to change/replace and how often to do so. Just follow that and you’re golden🙌🏼 my 09 civic has 200k miles and i’ve never ran into any mechanical issues; every single thing on my car is stock, except alternator and battery.
Honestly the airbox is the hardest part becides getting the lower clamp off the filter. I even had a hose clamp tool, but it wouuldnt close tight enough to fully release the clamp. It just bent my tool! took hours on one clamp, & ive been wrenching since the 90's
Yea, access is quite difficult. There is no room to move tools into position. The airbox is a pain to remove and even harder to get back in. I will run at least 100,000 miles on the new filter before I replace it again.
After removing the two screws that secure the air box there is a really annoying black pin with a rubber gasket.... NOT A GASKET JUST PULL STRAIGHT UP ITS A RUBBER CYLINDER THE BLACK PIN IS SOLID
Pain to get the air box off. I have what looks like a round rivet head thats holding the air box in. Do I have to cut the head off? It's on the left side towards the back of airbox.
Great video! Very well done. I'm about to do this very same thing on my daughters 09 civic w/150,000...I'm assuming the fluid and filter have never been changed. It has started to not shift in O/D and I figure this would be a great place to start. Any opions or advice would be greatly appreciated. Thanks jason
Remove both rubber hoses that attach to the in-line transmission filter. I found it was easier to get at the clips on the opposite ends of the filter hoses and easier to reinstall. So when you pull the filter, it still has the hoses attached.
Thanks for sharing. It was a struggle to get the clamps off the old filter. Having the right hose clamp pliers or needle nose vicegrips would have helped. Taking both clamps off the upper part and removing the hose higher up helps maneuver it better. A dab of grease helped slide clamps and hoses afterwards.
Any suggestions on installing an automatic transmission cooler? What line to install the cooler on. I would assume running it after the filter, but unsure which way the fluid is flowing. If you guys have any suggestions that would be great!
Rust / corrosion / impact wrench happy technicians will do that... A long extension / breaker bar works wonders. If you don't have one of those, you can try slipping a pipe or something else hollow over your wrench and using that for extra leverage. If you are using a floor jack, the handle to the jack works well too. When replacing the drain bolt, you don't need that much force at all. Hand tight + a quarter turn for the crush washer (about 30ish foot lbs of torque) is plenty sufficient.
Drain and refill = 2.5 Qts, but total capacity = 6.2 Qts. Does that mean that regular change of ATF and filter only replaced half of the old AFT in the system?
@@DrRestorations You would want to change the transmission oil and let it cycle for about 1000 miles or some people just suggest a good full week of driving and then change it out again. So you'd be doing two transmission changes. That's probably the safest way to do it.
quick question, had the fluid change few months ago, but not sure if the car shop did the filter change also. Is it ok to change the filter with the fluid inside? great video nonetheless
While going on slope, my civic 2007 not changing the gear fastly Do you think its because of gear oil? Or filter? I changed last year and so far i drive 70,000 km Can somebody please advise
I imagine it would be very similar if not the same. Thanks for watching! Do you mean it turns right while you're driving or when when your coming to a stop?
great video !!!!...thanks for posting this tutorial...i could not find how to replace the filter for oil change. thanks to your video now i know were is located...keep up the great work 👍🏻😊......
Yes, 2/3 is still in transmission and torque converter. So to flush, Drive car through all gears including reverse, then drain oil, do this three to four times so mostly new oil is in... Easy to drain, no lift required..
Well; if you replace the oil in the transmission/ diff, you still have , maybe, half of the oil left in the torque converter and oil cooler, how do I replace that ; or is it enough to just replace what is in the transmission ?......... very good video!!!!, thank you
Having the filter accessible like this makes the transmission last longer. I know on 7th gen Accord V6 models you can get to it. How ever the 8th gen you cant. Same goes for the Acura TL’s 07 to 11.
Yea it's a real pain to get this back in correctly. I tried putting this back on because I don't want my cold air intake on anymore. I can't get that front bolt on the air box lined up to save my life. Taking into a mechanic tomorrow for I don't break anything. Good video though.
Great Video. I just wonder if we have to change the transmission fluid filter inside the transmission pan ? Taking it out from underneath of the car seems like a pain. Thanks
Why wouldnt you flush all the 6 liters out? Ive seen guys run the car by disconnecting the high side pressure line into a bucket and pour new fluid in until it runs clean
Is the process some what simular for the manual transmission? Like is there also a filter in the same location. I've tried searching videos on the this subject, but they all do it on 2006+ Civic Si's
Lol brings back memories I put the filter in backwards thankfully it wouldn't attach on the bracket (idiot proof). I saw there is a filter strainer inside the transmission does this ever get changed? 25420-RPC-003
I had 180K on the original filter before I changed it. I cut it open and other than discolored filter media, it looked fairly ok. I won't replace it again for at least another 100K miles.
@@JDMSTRT For so called for ever parts I tend to do it every second change out, if it uses filter media, for screens I just back wash, clean and dry then re-install. Edit, after seeing a video of one getting dismantled, I'd change it with every fluid change!
The only question i have is why drain 2-3 quarts of old fluid out and replace it with new when the system is a 6 quart capacity? There is still 3-4 quarts of old fluid in the system. You would never do an oil change in an engine.
If the partial 3 qt. change is done frequently enough, it is adequate If you run the mileage to 60K or 70K between any changes, then the dilution approach would be appropriate. That's adding the 3 qt., driving awhile then changing it again. A third change in succession pretty well dilutes most of the old fluid out.
transmissions get use to old fluid. Its actually better to only change out 3 quarts rather than to flush entire transmission of (6 quarts). This way it stays clean & wont throw off friction consistency too much.
Filter looks brand new! You will need to stick that in an oil drum and then ask the customer if they want a new one like they have done me! Can't trust these chain oil change places...they are in business to make as much off you as possible. They will break things that work to make more money!
It's a great idea with the inline filter but I think dropping the pan would have been easier than trying to remove the air filter box and filter. It took me a few hours, a fight all the way. I had to go in from the underneath with a lift also to get the back hose clamp off the filter. I think I will pay to get this done again for my other Civics, '09 & '10. The video seems bit deceiving to me, nothing was easy and fast to do.
I have a 2008 Accord with 75K miles. I'm the first owner. Never did a transmission flush on it. I heard Honda transmission are picky. I seen many videos. Each one is a little different. I heard to do a flush. I'll have to go through 9qts. Some said no just take 3/4 out and add to it. So can you please tell me the proper way to do it? Anyone?
The 9 quart approach is essentially renewing the entire volume of the fluid. The 3 quart replacement would be good too; I'd just run less miles on the transmission before doing the next 3 quart change. I do the 3 quart change every 10K miles - the fluid coming out always looks relatively uncontaminated (minimal dark coloration).
80s cars were easier to maintenance them compare to now, So difficult. Reason, in my opinion, if you’re able to do everything on a car then there’s no point on having shops. It’s all business.
This is the worst filter location I've ever experienced. A filter inside a transmission pan would be much easier to replace than this ridiculously positioned filter. You can only fit one hand behind the engine to install the filter, hoses and clamps. I'll never buy another Civic with this type of filter configuration. I feel like cutting a hole in the cowl so I can reach the stupid thing.
I was able to get the air box out, but seating it back in took a frikkin deadblow, and I chipped the box’s lip in two places, and I was never able to get the big hose in the back back on properly, so car is still sitting in garage. Couldn’t get the hose clamps on the lines to the filter to compress either, so didn’t even change the filter. Total disaster and total failure. Gonna have to take somewhere to get it done.
@@2carpros I did it!!! Much needed perseverance, but nailed it!!! Fresh new transmission liquid and filter. Thanks for the video!!! Definitely helped!!!
@@2carpros The point is that if you drain a gearbox, transmission, rear differential, radiator, Before confirming that you can fill it you can create a huge headache for yourself. Also by accessing the fill port 1st the fluid will drain faster.
I just finished up doing this…oh boy was it a doozy to do the filter! A bit of advice for anyone doing it yourself:
-it’s easier to remove the filter with the hoses still attached, then remove the hoses once the filter is out of the car and stick ‘em on the new filter
-if you have a Jack and Jack stands, use them and go in from under the car to access the bottom of the filter, that way you can actually see what you’re doing.
-patience is key with this one. Took me about 2.5 hours
That thing looks like it’s a pain in the tuchus
Air filter housing was the worst part of the job! Great video!
Thanks 👍
I removed mine years ago to install a K&N intake so it’s just two bolts and a clamp to get it out.
Thats what I need to do I just had to replace the trans sensor last night and oh boy the sucked@dtown-fi5xs
Wow thank god for the Japanese right? That's some good design. Most cars make you remove the pan just to drain the fluid, as well as replace the filter. Honda really makes maintenance so easy.
Except for the filter location that you can only reach with one hand.
Not so fast Daniel son , there is an internal filter also , so don’t play the “ Cobra Kai never die “ card yet 😭
Thanks for including the filter. Not many videos mention it!
Thanks for watching!
If you do a drain and fill transmission fluid change, you'll only get out about a third of the fluid each time, so usually people do at least 3 drain and fills to get most of the fluid out. If you're doing it that way, might as well change the filter on your 3rd fluid change since most of the fluid will be new by now.
That's expensive smdan
I get gasket & filter package with 3 or 4 quarts of oil.
@@2carpros I bought a used 09 Civic last year at 99,000km it's now at 129,000km. Should I change the transmission fluid or should I wait for the code to appear on the display? Thanks
Do you have a part number on the washer for the drain plug? Im assuming its different that the oil drain plug washer, and I can't find the thing unless Im buying a new drain plug.
i bought a drain plug washer for my oil changed and i thought on the product name it said for both so they might be the same washer. idk tho i’ll try to find the place i found it
Yep I would say you got it to 29 foot lbs.
Thank you for watching!
Yep, just tighten to PFT, ( "pretty ..uckin' tight), and that should do it.
German torque bro
lol. I noticed that too.
Changing the filter is not an easy task.
Ain’t fricken kidding
I invented curse words while doing it
Facts. I’m dreading it😔
How did you get the clips off the filter? I can't for the life of me get them off. You didn't show that part and that's the most hardest 💯
Hello there and thank you for the great video! What is the long tool you used to reach the bolt for the air box?
That would be called an extension...
I don't mean this to sound so snarky, but it was really satisfying to watch y'all struggle with that damn air box. I was like: ah, even the pros struggled with such a simple piece, I now feel better about how long it took me to get it in 😂😂
Haha I get that!
Any advice of removing the drain plug? Mines on there super tight, can't get it off with a ½ratchet(with adapter) and yanking the ratchet with a hammer as a hook on the ratchet
Great video, I recently purchased a 2009 civic with 21,000 miles from the 93 year old original owner.
Other than a new alternator, battery, and belt it’s completely stock, what if anything should I do as far as maintenance is concerned?
Other than the air and cabin filter?
Please include the part numbers for the
Transmisión filter, and drain plug washer as well. Thank you…
If its completely stock, well maintained by previous owner, and only 21k miles, you got a car that will last you a crazy long time if you continue to maintain it properly. I would check the owners manual to see the recommendations for maintenance. It will show you what you need to change/replace and how often to do so. Just follow that and you’re golden🙌🏼 my 09 civic has 200k miles and i’ve never ran into any mechanical issues; every single thing on my car is stock, except alternator and battery.
You seemed to struggle with the removal of the air box. Should any other components adjacent to it be removed to facilitate an easier extraction?
Honestly the airbox is the hardest part becides getting the lower clamp off the filter. I even had a hose clamp tool, but it wouuldnt close tight enough to fully release the clamp. It just bent my tool! took hours on one clamp, & ive been wrenching since the 90's
Yea, access is quite difficult. There is no room to move tools into position. The airbox is a pain to remove and even harder to get back in. I will run at least 100,000 miles on the new filter before I replace it again.
what is the tool used at 2:15?
is it hard to change the trans filter?im wondering if i can do it. i change oil by myself. and where did you buy the new trans filter?
That air box would made me walk away.
Ho did you get those two hoses out of the way on top of the filter?
After removing the two screws that secure the air box there is a really annoying black pin with a rubber gasket.... NOT A GASKET JUST PULL STRAIGHT UP ITS A RUBBER CYLINDER THE BLACK PIN IS SOLID
Don’t you have to warm up your car to Operating temperature before hanging the oil?
Not really. But you do need to reach operating temperature to check the fluid level.
i have a 2011 civic lxs
and did a full tune up. is this where it is on an lx s? i just changed the fluid
Pain to get the air box off. I have what looks like a round rivet head thats holding the air box in. Do I have to cut the head off? It's on the left side towards the back of airbox.
Great video! Very well done. I'm about to do this very same thing on my daughters 09 civic w/150,000...I'm assuming the fluid and filter have never been changed. It has started to not shift in O/D and I figure this would be a great place to start. Any opions or advice would be greatly appreciated. Thanks jason
Yeah this is a great place to start! Let me know what happens. Thank you so much for watching!
Remove both rubber hoses that attach to the in-line transmission filter. I found it was easier to get at the clips on the opposite ends of the filter hoses and easier to reinstall. So when you pull the filter, it still has the hoses attached.
@@timetryp422 thats what I did its a bit easy that way than removing the hose from both end of the filter.
@jew395 What happened to the transmission?
@@mostafahonari8443 ...No reply we're all left hanging :(
Does this have an internal filter? If yes, could anyone send the link or at least any literature about it?
Thank you!
Thanks for sharing. It was a struggle to get the clamps off the old filter. Having the right hose clamp pliers or needle nose vicegrips would have helped. Taking both clamps off the upper part and removing the hose higher up helps maneuver it better. A dab of grease helped slide clamps and hoses afterwards.
hello i failed to find an atf filter for my fd2 k20z auto.. is it the same location where u found yours?..
How would you do this on a 2000 Honda Accord LX 4 cylinder VTec? Would it be similar to this?
Any suggestions on installing an automatic transmission cooler? What line to install the cooler on. I would assume running it after the filter, but unsure which way the fluid is flowing. If you guys have any suggestions that would be great!
What kinda transmission fluid do you use?
Is there an answer for this?
gotta use that genuine honda atf
Holy f**** this is hard. Every piece I try to remove is stuck on. Fml.
Rust / corrosion / impact wrench happy technicians will do that... A long extension / breaker bar works wonders. If you don't have one of those, you can try slipping a pipe or something else hollow over your wrench and using that for extra leverage. If you are using a floor jack, the handle to the jack works well too. When replacing the drain bolt, you don't need that much force at all. Hand tight + a quarter turn for the crush washer (about 30ish foot lbs of torque) is plenty sufficient.
I imagine you're talking about removing the airbox....I had an issue too because of the rivet on the upper left
Even changing the air filter is a pain!
Drain and refill = 2.5 Qts, but total capacity = 6.2 Qts. Does that mean that regular change of ATF and filter only replaced half of the old AFT in the system?
Correct. You are changing half of the fluid and more importantly the filter. Thanks for watching!
@@2carpros So is there a way to completely flush out all the old ATF and replace with new ATF?
@@DrRestorations You would want to change the transmission oil and let it cycle for about 1000 miles or some people just suggest a good full week of driving and then change it out again. So you'd be doing two transmission changes. That's probably the safest way to do it.
Hi I have a I shift gearbox auto is this the same as yours
Where’d you buy the filter I can’t find one anywhere
Try rockauto.com thanks for watching!
quick question, had the fluid change few months ago, but not sure if the car shop did the filter change also. Is it ok to change the filter with the fluid inside? great video nonetheless
No. You would have to take the fluid out to get to the filter. Thanks for watching!
While going on slope, my civic 2007 not changing the gear fastly
Do you think its because of gear oil?
Or filter?
I changed last year and so far i drive 70,000 km
Can somebody please advise
I have a 2010 Honda civic. Do places like jiffy lube replace the filter as well.?
They are supposed to. Thanks for watching!
Is the torque 29 or 36?
Is this the same on automatic and manual trannies?
Nope. Here is a link for Manual. th-cam.com/video/WqDixYeqslI/w-d-xo.html
How much do those filters cost?
Anyone got the part number for the filter?
Would this be the same for the 2009 honda jazz?
Also, my steering turns to the right on its own, what coyld be the cause of this?
I imagine it would be very similar if not the same. Thanks for watching!
Do you mean it turns right while you're driving or when when your coming to a stop?
great video !!!!...thanks for posting this tutorial...i could not find how to replace the filter for oil change. thanks to your video now i know were is located...keep up the great work 👍🏻😊......
Thanks so much for watching!
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
What about the torque converter. dont you have to drain the fluid in that.
You can't get at it.
Yes, 2/3 is still in transmission and torque converter. So to flush, Drive car through all gears including reverse, then drain oil, do this three to four times so mostly new oil is in... Easy to drain, no lift required..
the only way to empty that is to do a flush......
What about the oil in the oil cooler and torque converter?
In what regard?
Well; if you replace the oil in the transmission/ diff, you still have , maybe, half of the oil left in the torque converter and oil cooler, how do I replace that ; or is it enough to just replace what is in the transmission ?......... very good video!!!!, thank you
Any videos on 2014 and up Acura RDXs? Would love some. Please
If I get one in I will do some fix it videos for you! Thank you for watching!
Thank you, I would love that. I just purchased a 2014 RDX and would like to do some work on it myself. Cheers
Having the filter accessible like this makes the transmission last longer. I know on 7th gen Accord V6 models you can get to it. How ever the 8th gen you cant. Same goes for the Acura TL’s 07 to 11.
Where is a place to buy the washers at
EBay.
Go to Honda Dealership parts for all your supplies. Maybe a couple nickels more than advanced auto parts but you are getting honda genuine products.
There's no shortage of online shops selling Honda OEM parts. Seek and Yea Shall Find.
Yea it's a real pain to get this back in correctly. I tried putting this back on because I don't want my cold air intake on anymore. I can't get that front bolt on the air box lined up to save my life. Taking into a mechanic tomorrow for I don't break anything. Good video though.
Lol you dont need that bolt anyways, as long as the airbox is hooked up to the hose and the connections are good.
Great Video. I just wonder if we have to change the transmission fluid filter inside the transmission pan ? Taking it out from underneath of the car seems like a pain. Thanks
You don't have to but it will increase the life of your transmission. I always replace the filter when I change the fluid. Thanks for watching!
U have a vid of that?
Is there a transmission filter ( a second one) inside the transmission pan, too?..
There is no pan on this transmission. No filter internal filter is accessible.
can you guys make a video on the same topic but for a 2007 (type 56) mini cooper s.
If one comes in I will do a video on it! Thank you for watching!
outstanding. I will keep watching , fingers crossed. (I live to far away to drop off my mini)
Sell it!
Hi, Is this good for a 2014 civic CVT transmission???
It should be very similar. Thank you for watching!
2CarPros
Than you was just wondering about the filter part of it was a inside the pan or on the lines...
Why wouldnt you flush all the 6 liters out? Ive seen guys run the car by disconnecting the high side pressure line into a bucket and pour new fluid in until it runs clean
You can do it that way, but you have to know what you are doing, otherwise, you could do a huge amount of damage.
Really great video! Seems pretty simple
Glad you think so!
thanks for including the filter budy
is this the same for honda civic 2013?
Yes it should be super similar, thank you for watching!
Is the process some what simular for the manual transmission? Like is there also a filter in the same location. I've tried searching videos on the this subject, but they all do it on 2006+ Civic Si's
Manuals shouldn't have a filter. Just drain and refill.
Lol brings back memories I put the filter in backwards thankfully it wouldn't attach on the bracket (idiot proof). I saw there is a filter strainer inside the transmission does this ever get changed? 25420-RPC-003
Anyone know if it’s ok to change my Honda at 130k miles ?
I recommend every 60-100k Thanks for watching!
What bout the other 3.5 quarts?
It is in the converter.
Muzac really brings it home
Nice video. I have changed fluid couple time but never changed the filter
I had 180K on the original filter before I changed it. I cut it open and other than discolored filter media, it looked fairly ok. I won't replace it again for at least another 100K miles.
@@timetryp422 so whats the perfect mile for changing it
@@JDMSTRT For so called for ever parts I tend to do it every second change out, if it uses filter media, for screens I just back wash, clean and dry then re-install. Edit, after seeing a video of one getting dismantled, I'd change it with every fluid change!
How often do i really need to do this? my 2013 civic has 63k miles and i've changed the fluid twice so far.
Probably good for 100K miles. That is for the filter only.
U maybe over doing it. I did mine at 50K/96 months, and fluid still looks cherry red. Chilton's manual says every 120K or 72 months.
I done the filter from underneath, wasn’t to bad
What about the fluid in the catalytic converter ?
When should this be done?
Right around 100k miles. Thanks for watching!
The only question i have is why drain 2-3 quarts of old fluid out and replace it with new when the system is a 6 quart capacity? There is still 3-4 quarts of old fluid in the system. You would never do an oil change in an engine.
If the partial 3 qt. change is done frequently enough, it is adequate If you run the mileage to 60K or 70K between any changes, then the dilution approach would be appropriate. That's adding the 3 qt., driving awhile then changing it again. A third change in succession pretty well dilutes most of the old fluid out.
transmissions get use to old fluid. Its actually better to only change out 3 quarts rather than to flush entire transmission of (6 quarts). This way it stays clean & wont throw off friction consistency too much.
The music should've turned angry any time you were dealing with the air box lol
LOL Now that would be funny. Thanks for watching!
Awesome video 💯percent accurate..Thanks soo much!!😉
You are so welcome!
You literally never have to change that filter. Honda doesn’t even change it in the regular transmission service intervals.
That music though.. 👌🏽
Awesome! Thank you
You're welcome!
Filter looks brand new! You will need to stick that in an oil drum and then ask the customer if they want a new one like they have done me! Can't trust these chain oil change places...they are in business to make as much off you as possible. They will break things that work to make more money!
It's a great idea with the inline filter but I think dropping the pan would have been easier than trying to remove the air filter box and filter. It took me a few hours, a fight all the way. I had to go in from the underneath with a lift also to get the back hose clamp off the filter. I think I will pay to get this done again for my other Civics, '09 & '10. The video seems bit deceiving to me, nothing was easy and fast to do.
They never claimed it was easier or faster. Time consuming project!!
Anyone else notice that this Civic has an egr delete? 😂
*intense breathing*
Thanks for watching!
I have a 2008 Accord with 75K miles. I'm the first owner. Never did a transmission flush on it. I heard Honda transmission are picky. I seen many videos. Each one is a little different. I heard to do a flush. I'll have to go through 9qts. Some said no just take 3/4 out and add to it. So can you please tell me the proper way to do it? Anyone?
The 9 quart approach is essentially renewing the entire volume of the fluid. The 3 quart replacement would be good too; I'd just run less miles on the transmission before doing the next 3 quart change. I do the 3 quart change every 10K miles - the fluid coming out always looks relatively uncontaminated (minimal dark coloration).
This is for 8th gen honda civic 2006!!!! - 2011
Had my 2010 for 12 years with 150000 and didn't know about a filter.
Replacing the filter is essential. Thanks for watching!
that air box seems like a pain in the ass
80s cars were easier to maintenance them compare to now, So difficult. Reason, in my opinion, if you’re able to do everything on a car then there’s no point on having shops. It’s all business.
Good job
Thank you so much for watching!
Lots of work.
Molto bello, ma non sapevo ci fosse un filtro anche lì. Tks
This is the worst filter location I've ever experienced. A filter inside a transmission pan would be much easier to replace than this ridiculously positioned filter. You can only fit one hand behind the engine to install the filter, hoses and clamps. I'll never buy another Civic with this type of filter configuration. I feel like cutting a hole in the cowl so I can reach the stupid thing.
Elevator music.
The best! Thanks for watching!
Yeah man just stop explaining when you do the most difficult part, getting the air box out
I was able to get the air box out, but seating it back in took a frikkin deadblow, and I chipped the box’s lip in two places, and I was never able to get the big hose in the back back on properly, so car is still sitting in garage. Couldn’t get the hose clamps on the lines to the filter to compress either, so didn’t even change the filter. Total disaster and total failure. Gonna have to take somewhere to get it done.
Went back and seated the air hose correctly using lube to help. Never did change the filter though.
Airbox looked like a pita....
Damn! That transmission filter is a PAIN IN THE A$$!!!
Yeah but, we got this! Thank you for watching!
@@2carpros I did it!!! Much needed perseverance, but nailed it!!! Fresh new transmission liquid and filter. Thanks for the video!!! Definitely helped!!!
Looks easier than having to drop the transmission pan from underneath and replace the gasket method, though..
@@steveandrews8301 Not at all easier or faster.
4
Never Never drain anything with out 1st accessing the fill port.
What? You have to change it some way or another. Doesn't matter how you fill it. Thanks for watching.
@@2carpros The point is that if you drain a gearbox, transmission, rear differential, radiator, Before confirming that you can fill it you can create a huge headache for yourself. Also by accessing the fill port 1st the fluid will drain faster.
@@jefferyshelley6480 IT'S A FUCKING DIPSTICK FILL POINT NUMNUTZ
PZA honda 25430 - PLR - 003