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Transmission gaskets and seals are the barriers keeping fluid where it belongs — inside the case, not on your driveway. This collection covers over 1,000 parts spanning both automatic and manual transmissions: output shaft seals, input shaft seals, oil pump seals and gaskets, torque converter seals, extension housing seals, oil pan gaskets, valve body gaskets, and dozens of application-specific seals. Most lip seals and o-rings fail gradually due to heat cycling, fluid degradation, or shaft wear — typically showing up after 80,000–120,000 miles, though contaminated fluid accelerates deterioration significantly. When sourcing replacements, match the seal's inner diameter, outer diameter, and lip profile exactly; an off-spec seal on an output shaft will leak under highway-speed rotation even if it installs cleanly. OEM seals are worth the premium on torque converter and oil pump positions where pressure is highest. For pan gaskets, reusable rubber-molded designs are generally more reliable than cork on modern applications.
Signs you need replacement
- Red or brown fluid pooling under the vehicle near the transmission or differential. Puddles forming at the front of the transmission typically indicate an input shaft or oil pump seal failure; leaks at the rear point to output shaft or extension housing seals.
- Transmission fluid level dropping without an obvious external spill. A slow seep from a pan gasket or dipstick tube seal won't always puddle visibly but will steadily deplete fluid, leading to slipping or delayed engagement if ignored.
- Slipping, shuddering, or overheating in an automatic transmission. A failing torque converter seal or oil pump seal can cause internal pressure loss, producing symptoms that mimic more expensive mechanical failures before the actual leak becomes visible.
- Fluid on the bellhousing or clutch components on a manual transmission. Input shaft seal leakage allows transmission fluid to contaminate the clutch disc, causing chatter, slipping, or complete clutch failure — the seal must be replaced before fitting a new clutch.
- Visible cracking, hardening, or deformation on inspected seals or gaskets. During any transmission service or R&R, seals that show heat-induced brittleness or o-rings that have taken a permanent set should be replaced regardless of whether active leakage is present.
Frequently asked questions
- How often should transmission seals and gaskets be replaced? There's no fixed mileage interval for most seals — they're typically replaced on-condition when leakage appears or during a transmission rebuild. However, if you're already removing the transmission for a clutch job or rebuild, replace all accessible seals and the pan gasket regardless of condition; the labor cost to revisit them later far exceeds the cost of the parts.
- Are aftermarket transmission seals as reliable as OEM? For standard lip seals — output shaft, extension housing, and shift shaft positions — quality aftermarket brands using PTFE or nitrile rubber compounds perform comparably to OEM at a lower price. For oil pump seals, torque converter seals, and any application with tight dimensional tolerances, OEM or a direct-fit premium brand is worth the extra cost to avoid a repeat repair.
- What else should I replace when doing an output shaft or input shaft seal? Inspect the shaft surface itself for a wear groove where the old seal rode — a worn shaft will leak through a new seal quickly. A speedi-sleeve or shaft repair sleeve can save you from replacing the shaft. On automatics, replace the transmission fluid and filter at the same time; degraded fluid is a primary cause of early seal failure.














































