Curious about the Case/IH transmission oil and your wet clutch? Must have been fine.
I used Case/IH HYTRANS oil in our 01 Cr500 (steel plates) and never experienced it turning black or metallic skimming in the drain pan. Some on the CR500riders forum promote using the advanced power shift/hydraulic oils in them.
BW,
The HyTrans works very well in the two stroke transmission, very smooth shifting and little or no clutch fade. I think John Deere TransGuard would work as well. I've tried HyTrans in the aluminum clutch plate Cr250s/125s we have as well. The aluminum clutch plates contaminate the oil quickly. The drained oil in pan looks like a layer of never seize is floating on top. I couldn't imagine a four stroke oil filter not plugging at competitive level riding. The Honda 4 Stroke CrFs have very short 5hr engine oil change intervals, I'm thinking. At my level of riding Dirt or Street aluminum plates are not a major performance concern of mine.
The CaseIh HyTrans as you probably already know is designed for powershift "wet clutch" transmissions, hypoid rearend gears, plantetarys, needle bearings, needle thrusts etc as well as Hydraulics systems, hydraulic motors etc.
The older non-cvt trans typically use multiple wet clutch speeds and range gears that are shifted without clutching. The formulation doesn't have to include the requirements of the internal combustion engines
The HyTrans and TransGaurd brands are not known to attack brass. Beware some trans/hydraulic oils will.
Don't ask me why I know Caterpillar TO30 will dissolve brass. Some hydraulic charge pumps have brass separator plates.
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