I put in my second hour of time on my new bush hog for the KX-057-4. There is a learning curve to this that I wasn't expecting. You can see how slow I am. But nothing like my first hour - LOL.
Can you post a pic of what you were using to cut with?I put in my second hour of time on my new bush hog for the KX-057-4. There is a learning curve to this that I wasn't expecting. You can see how slow I am. But nothing like my first hour - LOL.
Great idea, thanks @In Utopia. It is a Construction Attachments 4 foot bush hog mounted to a KX-057-4 mini excavator.Can you post a pic of what you were using to cut with?
If you haven’t run it lately then the heavier dirt had a chance to settle out. Are you able to get a look inside the case? A couple ways to tackle it if it bothers you. Fill it and forget it till the next service, fill it and run it till hot. Now drain and refill. Should get most if not all that dirt in suspension. Lastly, get a couple cans of brake cleaner and go to to town and hose out what you can. Once happy or delirious from the fumes, let it dry and fill with oil. Personally on my mmm and brush hog gear boxes, I change the oil on them when warm from operation. If it is just dirty and not metal flake filled, I would not be that concerned.Overhauled my 60" mower deck; pressure washed, painted (spray) any areas that were down to bare metal, new belt, new blades, gear oil change, lubed all zerks, and lubed the pto shaft - crazy that all of this needed to be done on a 4 year old tractor with less than 100 hours, but the previous owner didn't seem to take care of these things.
Question; the gear oil looked very clean until the last 1/3 or so came out, which was quite dirty looking, is that pretty typical, or is that a sign of a potential issue? I stuck a magnet in it to make sure it wasn't metal flakes, and the magnet returned with nothing other than gear oil, but wanted to see if this was normal?
I'll bring the tanqueray and tonic.My daughter bought a lemon tree and lime bush. Had to fine a place to put them so we expanded a flower bed with full sun. Gave me an excuse to use the new tiller again. View attachment 99472 View attachment 99473 View attachment 99474 View attachment 99475 View attachment 99476
I've yet to even hook it up to the tractor, which I purchased in November and was in snow mode (rear snowblower attached), so it's likely sat since mid-October (or before) since being run. I wasn't sure if some dirty looking gear oil was 'normal' or if it could be a seal going bad? Given the shape they had the mower deck in, I'm guessing it is just residual from all the dirt and rocks they were mowing (given how the blades looked).If you haven’t run it lately then the heavier dirt had a chance to settle out. Are you able to get a look inside the case? A couple ways to tackle it if it bothers you. Fill it and forget it till the next service, fill it and run it till hot. Now drain and refill. Should get most if not all that dirt in suspension. Lastly, get a couple cans of brake cleaner and go to to town and hose out what you can. Once happy or delirious from the fumes, let it dry and fill with oil. Personally on my mmm and brush hog gear boxes, I change the oil on them when warm from operation. If it is just dirty and not metal flake filled, I would not be that concerned.
Check around your seals to make sure it isn’t leaking. Did you happen to notice when you pulled the fill plug if the oil was up to the correct level? A MMM lives in a very dirty location. At a minimum mine gets blown off clean after every use and if dirty, I break out the pressure washer. I also grease mine every other use but I bought a 20+yr old B1700 with a MMM. Helps to spot potential leaks and issues.I've yet to even hook it up to the tractor, which I purchased in November and was in snow mode (rear snowblower attached), so it's likely sat since mid-October (or before) since being run. I wasn't sure if some dirty looking gear oil was 'normal' or if it could be a seal going bad? Given the shape they had the mower deck in, I'm guessing it is just residual from all the dirt and rocks they were mowing (given how the blades looked).
I did have the thought of changing it while warm (gear oil), sounds like I'll do that at the end of the season, unless the mower decides to stop working - hopefully that won't be the case, given the deck has maybe 50-60 hours on it.
Didn't see any leaking gear oil or even any damp looking areas around the seals - not sure on the correct level, it was a lot more gear oil than i expected - I took a 16oz beer can and cut it down to about 1/3 the size and was able to get that under the drain plug, which that filled up twice and had a little bit left after that - I'll for sure be using an aluminum baking pan (cheap ones that are single use) next time, just so I don't have to sit a watch the oil drain out/spill over, rinse/repeat..Check around your seals to make sure it isn’t leaking. Did you happen to notice when you pulled the fill plug if the oil was up to the correct level? A MMM lives in a very dirty location. At a minimum mine gets blown off clean after every use and if dirty, I break out the pressure washer. I also grease mine every other use but I bought a 20+yr old B1700 with a MMM. Helps to spot potential leaks and issues.
Other than that, you should be good to get out there and get some seat time.
That is what happens when you divert 2 feet of rain into concrete "rivers" and send it to the ocean.This is CA…we are still in a drought