whitetiger
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Staff member
Equipment
Kubota tech..BX2370, RCK60, B7100HST, RTV900 w plow, Ford 1100 FWA
Not even for a doorstop!!!!!Thoughts on FRAM filters instead of OEM?
Not even for a doorstop!!!!!Thoughts on FRAM filters instead of OEM?
But a paperweight is fineNot even for a doorstop!!!!!
I'm probably wrong, but your mystery 'washer' looks suspiciously like the precision ground spacer used behind the carrier bearings in a rear axle. It is shown in your Kubota parts schematic next to the carrier bearing and ring gear, but I cannot make out the item number on the schematic. It appears in the #1 jpeg image on post #69, just next to the tapered roller bearing and the ring gear.Some additional info and pictures:
The "spacer", part is sized as shown in the pictures. It is deformed and not symmetrical anymore, it shows wear on all surfaces, it also has the look of a washer that was over tightened and is starting to "pull-in" or is tapered from the id to the od. All pieces were recovered! The thickness is also different across the part, there are sharp edges also. Still have no idea where it's from! Measurements are as it is now, it is not accurate for a new part, just for reference. I will clean my nails later! lol
If you look back a few posts you will see I located it.I'm probably wrong, but your mystery 'washer' looks suspiciously like the precision ground spacer used behind the carrier bearings in a rear axle. It is shown in your Kubota parts schematic next to the carrier bearing and ring gear, but I cannot make out the item number on the schematic. It appears in the #1 jpeg image on post #69, just next to the tapered roller bearing and the ring gear.
If they are anything like automotive units, they come in a variety of thicknesses to allow you to set the proper hypoid gear contact pattern.
Best of luck to you.
If you look back a few posts you will see I located it.
PLEASE GO READ STARTING HERE!I put a line pointing to what I believe is your ring. From your jpeg #1 If that isn't it, it is the item to the right of it.
2 of my mostest favorite sounds female drunkin laughter and automatic weapons fireI'm not sure, the one thing I am sure of is, Tractors are like Vets, you don't always see the damage done on the outside, often, you need to invest some quality time looking and fixing what's inside!
I do have Tractor PTSD, never sure when It will strike either. I do know a man it Ky who makes a product called Shoc-Shot. The tractor may meet some before long!
Egressman at Knob Creek Range!
Exactly…they are built TOO LIGHTLY for even a doorstop.Not even for a doorstop!!!!!
I just pulled a sample of the fluid, this is what it looks like after sitting all night. This is from the sumps lowest point, the drain under the rear axel! Now what? If I run it will the air come back?I'm not sure that's water in the fluid. I think it might be air bubbles. Take a sample in a clean glass jar and let it sit for a few hours or overnight. Bubbles will usually merge, float to the top, and disappear. Water will separate out and sink to the bottom.
Thanks for the information!Probably the air will come back. Air mixed in hydraulic fluid usually means there is a leak in the suction side somewhere. There is a possibility that the air was simply trapped somewhere in the system before the pump (anything after the pump would not be chopped up into froth like that). If you run it and the bubbles start building again, that pretty much confirms there is a suction side leak.
Ok, I checked all that. The problem started before I took it apart!Yep check all of the components on the suction side, even a bad filter gasket can cause issues.
Yes, fluid and filters are new and full.There are two separate pumps. One for the hydro (buried inside the transmission) and an external pump for the accessories like 3ph. Both share the same sump. Air introduced by either system will fill the sump with bubbles. The 3ph may rise OK with bubbles in the fluid -- the system just compresses the air. But hydraulic motors really don't like air in the fluid.
Is the fluid level correct? Low fluid will allow air to be sucked in.