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P0710 — Transmission Fluid Temperature Sensor Circuit

Moderate

Quick answer

P0710 means the fluid temperature sensor’s signal is electrically implausible. Typical symptoms: delayed or odd shifting (the computer adjusts shift behavior by fluid temperature) and sometimes disabled converter lockup. Before anything else: check the connector at the transmission, then measure the sensor’s resistance against the temperature chart.

What it means

Common causes

Ordered from most to least likely.

  1. 1.

    Low, degraded, or wrong-spec transmission fluid

    Always first. The fluid specification matters as much as the level.

  2. 2.

    Failed sensor or solenoid (per the specific code)

    Most test with a simple resistance measurement at the case connector.

  3. 3.

    Wiring or connector damage at the transmission

    The case connector lives in heat and spray; corroded pins are common.

  4. 4.

    Internal wear (clutches, valve body)

    The expensive story — earn it by ruling out the cheap ones first.

How to diagnose it, step by step

Cheapest and most likely checks first.

  1. 1 Check the fluid first

    Level per your vehicle’s procedure (dipstick or level-check plug), color on a white towel, and smell. Burnt or brown fluid reframes the whole diagnosis; low fluid plus a leak explains half of these codes.

  2. 2 Read all transmission codes

    Use a scanner that addresses the transmission module. The combination of codes (one solenoid vs. several, sensor + ratio together) localizes the fault.

  3. 3 Check the connector at the transmission, then measure the sensor’s resistance against the temperature chart

    This is the code-specific first move — do it before parts shopping.

  4. 4 Test electrically at the case connector

    Most transmission sensors and solenoids can be resistance-tested from the external connector with a wiring diagram, no disassembly needed.

  5. 5 Decide: pan-level repair or specialist

    Fluid, external sensors, and many solenoids are DIY-reachable. Valve body and internal clutch work usually isn’t — and a specific, confirmed code is exactly what an honest transmission shop wants to see.

Parts & tools you may need

  • OBD-II scanner with transmission module coverage
  • Digital multimeter
  • Correct transmission fluid for your vehicle (specification matters enormously)
  • Transmission pan gasket/filter kit (if dropping the pan)
  • Replacement sensor or solenoid (only after electrical tests confirm)

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Frequently asked questions

Can I drive with P0710?
Usually yes for the short term, especially if shifting feels normal. If the transmission enters limp mode or starts slipping, stop driving it and diagnose — slip damage compounds fast.
Will a fluid change fix it?
If the fluid is low, burnt, or wrong-spec — quite possibly, and it’s the mandatory first step regardless. It won’t fix a genuinely failed solenoid or sensor, which is why you test those electrically before and after.
Is this code a “transmission rebuild”?
Usually not. Most codes in this family are sensors, solenoids, wiring, or fluid — hundreds, not thousands. Internal repair only enters the picture when ratio/slip codes persist after the electrical and fluid layers check out.
Why do I also have P0700?
P0700 is just the messenger: the transmission module asked the engine computer to turn on the light. Your real diagnosis is this code.