North Idaho Wolfman
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Equipment
L3450DT-GST, Woods FEL, B7100 HSD, FEL, 60" SB, 743 Bobcat with V2203, and more
I don’t have one but I will be looking for one now. ThanksWhat, exactly, are the symptoms you are experiencing? Was the bushing an OEM one sourced from Kubota, or an aftermarket one?
I know (oh boy do I know!) that it can be tricky getting the FWD shaft engaged while inserting the transmission shaft through the clutch at the same time -- they are on an angle to each other -- however, the end of the transmission shaft doesn't make it to the pilot bushing in the crankshaft until well after the driveshaft is engaged. If you used a clutch-centering tool when you bolted the clutch to the flywheel, the clutch itself should guide the shaft into the pilot bushing with no possibility of damage to the bushing.
You did use a centering tool when installing the clutch, right?
Unfortunately there are no listings for a b7100 centering tool and I have no idea what the diameter and spline count is for that tractor. Do you have any idea where I can find that information or a part number?.I don’t have one but I will be looking for one now. Thanks
It is noisy like a clutch bearing going out when I ouch the clutch in. Same feel and sound it had before I replaced it.I don’t have one but I will be looking for one now. Thanks
A properly sized piece of wood dowel can be used for the job.Unfortunately there are no listings for a b7100 centering tool and I have no idea what the diameter and spline count is for that tractor. Do you have any idea where I can find that information or a part number?.
It sounds like a throw out bearing but it is not. That was changed also and worked perfectly for about a month the one replaced was not bad either but since I took it off I put on the new oneThe sounds your describing are not the pilot bearing but the throw out bearing being bad.
One common mistake is putting the throw out bearing on backwards, yes it can be done on this model.
just because something worked perfectly for a month doesn't mean it failed.It sounds like a throw out bearing but it is not. That was changed also and worked perfectly for about a month the one replaced was not bad either but since I took it off I put on the new one
My question would be why did it work perfectly after being replaced the first time and quietly. I will get a video. May take a whilejust because something worked perfectly for a month doesn't mean it failed.
and like I said they have know to be installed backwards and they work for awhile then they fail.
Pilot bushing issues do not make noise on these units.
They can be completely out and you never know it.
I think you need to open it up and see what going on, my guess would be a bearing on the front of the transmission.
But without a video with sound on the issue its all just a wild guess.
I'm not sure what changed, you might find the pilot bushing has failed, but if it has then it's not the bushings fault it's the out put shaft or bearings on that shaft that are causing the failure, or it does have a bent mounting plate.My question would be why did it work perfectly after being replaced the first time and quietly. I will get a video. May take a while
As others have implied, you don't have to match the splines, just the ID of the splines and the ID of the pilot. That will hold the clutch disk centered on the crankshaft while you torque down the mounting bolts, after that the springs will keep it in place.Unfortunately there are no listings for a b7100 centering tool and I have no idea what the diameter and spline count is for that tractor. Do you have any idea where I can find that information or a part number?.