Skip to content Skip to navigation menu

Your Selected Vehicle

Categories

  • 4wd, Adventure & Escape

Brands

Price

Parts for your 2008 Nissan Maxima-Oil seals

Sort by

Explore 4WD & Adventure

Showing 1 - 1 of 1 products

2008 Nissan Maxima oil seals — what they do, and when to replace them

Oil seals are absolutely used on the 2008 Nissan Maxima. Technical references including the Nissan Maxima Factory Service Manual (2008 A34/J31) confirm multiple seals such as the Crankshaft Front Oil Seal and Rear Oil Seal in the EM (Engine Mechanical) section, and the Drive Shaft/Output Oil Seals in the TM/AX (automatic transaxle) sections. Nissan’s electronic parts catalogue for J31/J32 also lists these seals as standard service components. So, for this model, “oil-seals” is a relevant and essential topic.

On a 2008 Maxima, oil seals keep engine and transaxle lubricants where they belong and stop dust and moisture getting in. The key ones owners will hear about are the front crankshaft seal (behind the crank pulley), the rear main seal (between engine and gearbox), and the transaxle output/drive shaft seals. When these seals harden or wear, they can mist, weep, or leak — and that’s when it’s time for attention.

  • Common clues: oil spots under the car, a burning oil whiff after a drive, oily residue around the crank pulley or lower timing cover, wetness at the bellhousing, or gearbox oil traces near the inner CV joints.

Oil seals aren’t a scheduled replacement item, but they should be inspected at every service. Keeping crankcase pressure under control (healthy PCV system), using the correct oil grade, and avoiding overfilling all help seals last longer. If the front end is apart for other work (e.g., accessory drive or front cover service), it’s smart and cost-effective to fit a fresh front crank seal then.

Replacement complexity varies. The front crank seal is typically a straightforward job once the pulley is off. The rear main seal is more involved because the gearbox has to come out