Why does the position of my steering wheel wander when going straight on level ground? I have a B series tractor.
Worn out parts eould be my first guess. Exactly what model B series tractor?Why does the position of my steering wheel wander when going straight on level ground? I have a B series tractor.
Or a couple $180 (OEM price) tie rod ends.....hmm. there's a $2K hydraulic unit bolted to the steering shaft that tells the steering cylinder what to do.....
it is possible it's defective....
It's a new tractor with 22 hours on it It's a B26001Worn out parts eould be my first guess. Exactly what model B series tractor?
Dan
I guess I misunderstood what you meant by "wander". Could you expound on thst?It's a new tractor with 22 hours on it It's a B26001
As GeoHorn says, there is no mechanical "steering column" on these tractors - it's all hydraulic. So the steering wheel/front axle alignment drifts a little as it runs. You wouldn't want your Corvette to work like that but it's a reliable and easy way to steer these tractors.Why does the position of my steering wheel wander when going straight on level ground? I have a B series tractor.
It's a new tractor with 22 hours on it. The steering wheel is never in the same position when going straight on level road. It can be a whole half turn off to the left or right. The dealer is ignoring my questions on this. Is this normal for the steering, or a problem?Does the steering wheel "wander", or is it able to be turned with a little force when the tractor is stopped and the wheels are turned all the way to one side's stop? My B2650 hydraulic steering "gives" a little whrn the steering wheel is turned against a stopped wheel, the hydraulic bypass kicks in the the steering wheel slowly drifts without the wheels moving.
Then there's the toe-in adjustment. As long a the steering knuckle ball joints are still tight, the toe-in should be just above 0 to about 1/4" max. If loose steering ball joint(s), or toe-in is actually toeing -out, then it will wander on the flat road.
I know because I've had both a loose ball replaced, and once at service interval corrected a slight toe-out, both causing steering wander on road. Can almost hands free drive it now on a flat paved area, steers real nice.
Yes, that's what I mean. Thanks for clearing it up for me.By “wander”…. do you mean it does not always return to the same (centered) position after making a hard turn? That’s completely normal… as there’s no hard-connection to the front wheels.
It's 100 normal, it hydrostatic steering so the steering wheel will change positions all the time.It's a new tractor with 22 hours on it. The steering wheel is never in the same position when going straight on level road. It can be a whole half turn off to the left or right. The dealer is ignoring my questions on this. Is this normal for the steering, or a problem?
Perfect answers to your questions. But I will just add that I think I have actual wandering in the steering of my BX since day one. This means it is hard to keep tracking straight, without compensating with the steering wheel.It's 100 normal, it hydrostatic steering so the steering wheel will change positions all the time.
That issue is usually not the actuator but the actual steering cylinder center seal is bad, again common issue.What Henro may be describing …. is like when driving straight-ahead…it requires you to constantly be slowly-turning the steering-wheel to maintain that straight-ahead travel. If so…that indicates a hydraulic steering actuator with an internal leak.…simple fix is to reseal it.
The steering cylinder is exactly what I meant by the term….not the orbital steering valve (controller is what Kubota calls it)….or the hydraulic pump…or the steering “handle” (steering wheel).. Thnks for clarifying.That issue is usually not the actuator but the actual steering cylinder center seal is bad, again common issue.
The b26 uses hydrostatic steering.The steering on the B7500HST I had was power (not hydrostatic) and the suicide knob always returned to the same spot. Weren't all the B series the same?
Common issue? Just Kubota or all tractors?That issue is usually not the actuator but the actual steering cylinder center seal is bad, again common issue.