trikepilot
Member
Equipment
B2620HSD w/ LA364 & BH65, 48SQ Bush Hog, LandPride RB1560, Woods 5ft Box Blade,
I have searched the interwebs as well as at this forum and other tractor centric places for a clean answer. The signal to noise ratio is about as high as one might expect - hence my post.
I have a SQ480 rotary cutter that I bought used as a package with my first tractor back in 2020. It had an unknown history but appeared top be in decent shape. It was used sparingly but effectively for a year or two. However, it has sat for the better part of two years out in the weather. I need it now, so I dragged it over to the shop to do a total servicing on it and I discovered that there was zero oil in the gearbox. I checked it with a flexible penlight and the gears were dry with a patina of rust. I refilled it with 80w-90 and before I could get the cutter out of the shop, there was a decent pool of oil on the floor. So I know what I am facing - a blown lower main seal.
I ordered a new one and the replacement went far, far easier than some had detailed on the internet. I guess I was lucky and it all came apart without complication. So new seal went in and after buttoning it all up, I filled her up with 80w-90 and all was dry after 10-15 mins. I fired it up and spun the blades for a few mins and again... no leaks. I took it out and mowed for 15mins without any adverse sounds, vibration, etc... I stopped to check oil levels and the gearbox was cool to touch and the main seal had not leaked yet. I was congratulating myself until I loosened the side drain cap and oil forcefully exploded out the hole.
So I know I am likely facing a vent cap up top of the gearbox that is not working correctly. I plan to clean it and retry and if that is not effective, I will replace. They are quite pricey for what they are - almost $30. Anybody know what thread and pitch they are?
My concern comes from the color and quality of the oil that came out. I know water and air micro bubbles will make the oil look milky. I am virtually sure that the gearbox was mostly dry at the outset cause I got a flexible penlight way down deep inside. I am pretty sure what I am looking at is the surface rust from all the gears that I could see has now rubbed off and is in suspension in the oil.
I kinda feel like I am overthinking this but I really want to drain all this oil out, use some sort of solvent to rinse and flush out the gearbox of all the particulate matter, and then refill with clean 80w-90 gear oil. I feel like many out there would say - "screw it! keep the current oil topped off for the season, run it like you stole it, and then change at the beginning of next season." But man... my OCD is pulling me to do a flush. The problem is I have found suggestions online to use mineral spirits, kerosene, diesel, and isopropyl alcohol mixed with ATF to do the rinse.
Is there any consensus among you more experienced tractor operators as to the best way to handle my situation (leave well enough alone vs flush and refill) and if its the latter, what is the best solvent and procedure to do so.
Thanks - TP
I have a SQ480 rotary cutter that I bought used as a package with my first tractor back in 2020. It had an unknown history but appeared top be in decent shape. It was used sparingly but effectively for a year or two. However, it has sat for the better part of two years out in the weather. I need it now, so I dragged it over to the shop to do a total servicing on it and I discovered that there was zero oil in the gearbox. I checked it with a flexible penlight and the gears were dry with a patina of rust. I refilled it with 80w-90 and before I could get the cutter out of the shop, there was a decent pool of oil on the floor. So I know what I am facing - a blown lower main seal.
I ordered a new one and the replacement went far, far easier than some had detailed on the internet. I guess I was lucky and it all came apart without complication. So new seal went in and after buttoning it all up, I filled her up with 80w-90 and all was dry after 10-15 mins. I fired it up and spun the blades for a few mins and again... no leaks. I took it out and mowed for 15mins without any adverse sounds, vibration, etc... I stopped to check oil levels and the gearbox was cool to touch and the main seal had not leaked yet. I was congratulating myself until I loosened the side drain cap and oil forcefully exploded out the hole.
So I know I am likely facing a vent cap up top of the gearbox that is not working correctly. I plan to clean it and retry and if that is not effective, I will replace. They are quite pricey for what they are - almost $30. Anybody know what thread and pitch they are?
My concern comes from the color and quality of the oil that came out. I know water and air micro bubbles will make the oil look milky. I am virtually sure that the gearbox was mostly dry at the outset cause I got a flexible penlight way down deep inside. I am pretty sure what I am looking at is the surface rust from all the gears that I could see has now rubbed off and is in suspension in the oil.
I kinda feel like I am overthinking this but I really want to drain all this oil out, use some sort of solvent to rinse and flush out the gearbox of all the particulate matter, and then refill with clean 80w-90 gear oil. I feel like many out there would say - "screw it! keep the current oil topped off for the season, run it like you stole it, and then change at the beginning of next season." But man... my OCD is pulling me to do a flush. The problem is I have found suggestions online to use mineral spirits, kerosene, diesel, and isopropyl alcohol mixed with ATF to do the rinse.
Is there any consensus among you more experienced tractor operators as to the best way to handle my situation (leave well enough alone vs flush and refill) and if its the latter, what is the best solvent and procedure to do so.
Thanks - TP
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