| DTC Data Sheet | |
| Code | P0741 |
| Vehicle | Chevrolet Silverado 1500 (2007-2019) |
| Engine | 4.8L-6.2L V8 (4L60E, 4L70E, 6L80E) |
| System | TRANSMISSION |
| Fault type | Performance |
| Official meaning | Torque Converter Clutch Circuit Performance / Stuck Off |
Definition source: Chevrolet factory description. Diagnostic guidance is based on factory-defined fault logic for this code.
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P0741 Quick Answer
P0741 on a Silverado means the PCM/TCM commanded the torque converter clutch to lock and it didn’t — the engine RPM stayed mechanically disconnected from the transmission output. On the 4L60E (2007-2013) the cause is usually the TCC solenoid in the valve body or PWM solenoid wear. On the 6L80E (2007-2019) it’s typically the TEHCM or burnt converter clutch material clogging the valve body.
What Does P0741 Mean on a Chevy Silverado 1500?
The Chevrolet Silverado 1500 (2007-2019) stores P0741 when the condition described above is met. This guide focuses on the 4.8L-6.2L V8 (4L60E, 4L70E, 6L80E) configuration — by far the most common Silverado powertrain. Diagnostic priorities and likely root causes differ from the generic SAE definition because of platform-specific failure patterns documented below.
Symptoms
- Check Engine Light (P0741)
- Slipping or shudder at highway cruise speeds (45-55 MPH)
- RPM “flares” — engine RPM doesn’t drop when crossing the lockup speed
- Reduced fuel economy on the highway
- Possible harsh shifts depending on the underlying fault
Common Causes (Most Likely on This Model First)
- 4L60E TCC solenoid failure. Located in the valve body. By 100k-150k miles the solenoid loses the ability to seal. Pan drop + solenoid replacement.
- 4L60E PWM solenoid wear. Controls TCC apply rate. Worn PWM solenoid causes “shudder” before P0741 appears.
- Burnt TCC clutch material. Friction material from the torque converter circulates and clogs valve body passages. Fluid is dark brown / black with a burnt smell. A simple fluid service won’t fix this — the converter is failing.
- 6L80E TEHCM internal fault. The transmission electro-hydraulic control module failure mode on the 6L80E. Replacement is expensive but covered under powertrain warranty within 100k miles.
- Wiring / connector at transmission case. Heat damage from the exhaust or backed-out pin. Inspect the harness.
- Low transmission fluid. Always check first — low fluid causes TCC apply failure that looks identical to a solenoid problem.
Diagnostic Approach
- Check transmission fluid level and condition first. Low fluid alone can cause P0741. Burnt-smelling fluid means the converter is already damaged — fluid service alone won’t fix it.
- Watch RPM vs. vehicle speed on a scan tool at steady 50 MPH cruise. Engine RPM should drop ~200-400 when TCC engages. If it doesn’t drop, the clutch isn’t locking.
- Bidirectional command of the TCC solenoid with a capable scan tool. The clutch should engage and you should feel the RPM drop.
- Inspect the transmission case connector for damage or backed-out pins.
- Pan drop and inspect for friction material in the pan — significant black material = converter clutch already failed mechanically.
- On the 4L60E, valve body removal allows TCC and PWM solenoid replacement without removing the transmission. The 6L80E requires TEHCM replacement which is also pan-side.
Possible Fixes
| Fix | When |
|---|---|
| Transmission fluid + filter service (Dexron VI) | Always first — fluid level low or condition burnt |
| TCC + PWM solenoid replacement (4L60E) | Solenoid won’t actuate on command, fluid is clean |
| TEHCM replacement (6L80E) | 6L80E with confirmed module fault |
| Torque converter replacement | Burnt fluid, friction material in pan, sustained shudder |
| Transmission rebuild | Significant clutch material in pan plus other shift faults |
Can I Still Drive With P0741?
Short-term yes if the transmission is shifting otherwise normally — you’ll just lose lockup at cruise and your fuel economy drops. Long-term no, especially if you feel shudder — sustained TCC slippage destroys the converter clutch material and contaminates the fluid, turning a $400 solenoid job into a $3,500 rebuild.
How Serious Is This Code?
Moderate. The fix is dramatically cheaper if you catch it before the converter clutch wears mechanically. Don’t ignore TCC shudder.
Repair Costs
| Repair | Cost |
|---|---|
| Transmission fluid + filter service | $240 – $480 |
| TCC + PWM solenoid (4L60E) | $340 – $720 |
| TEHCM replacement (6L80E) | $720 – $1,400 |
| Torque converter replacement | $1,400 – $2,800 |
| Transmission rebuild | $2,800 – $5,500 |
FAQ
What causes P0741 on a Chevy Silverado?
On 4L60E-equipped Silverados (2007-2013), the leading cause is the torque converter clutch solenoid in the valve body. On 6L80E trucks (2007-2019), it’s typically the TEHCM module. Burnt transmission fluid from worn converter clutch material is a common cause on high-mileage trucks regardless of trans family.
Can I drive my Silverado with P0741?
Short-term yes if shifts are otherwise normal. You’ll lose torque converter lockup at cruise — fuel economy drops noticeably on the highway. Long-term no — TCC shudder (which often accompanies P0741) destroys the converter clutch material and turns a solenoid job into a rebuild.
How much does P0741 cost to fix on a Silverado?
TCC solenoid replacement on the 4L60E: $340-$720. TEHCM replacement on the 6L80E: $720-$1,400. Torque converter replacement (if the clutch is mechanically failed): $1,400-$2,800. The cheap path requires catching it before the converter wears.
Will a transmission flush fix P0741?
A proper fluid + filter service can fix P0741 if the cause was burnt fluid contaminating the valve body. If the fluid comes out dark with friction material in the pan, the converter is already mechanically failing and a fluid service is a temporary improvement at best.