If the mower is too big, the tractor has no business having a three point hitch. I got the smallest mower I could. The mower deck is the same width as the rear wheelbase.or...
maybe the mower is too big/ too heavy ?
If the mower is too big, the tractor has no business having a three point hitch. I got the smallest mower I could. The mower deck is the same width as the rear wheelbase.or...
maybe the mower is too big/ too heavy ?
I’m glad the break occurred while the tractor was off. Less likely to have ingested casting bits.Curious.looked it up, that casting is about $1300 Canadian, seems kinday easy to replace BUT the big issue would be to remove any casting bits out of the internal area.
If the mower is too big and the fracture is caused by overpressure the hydraulics are poorly designed.If the mower is too big, the tractor has no business having a three point hitch. I got the smallest mower I could. The mower deck is the same width as the rear wheelbase. View attachment 128810
No. When the 3pt is raised and stationary the 3pt spool is closed. In tjat state the lift circuit is isolated from the main relief and unprotected from hydraulic shock loads.This is indeed the 3 point lift cylinder casting, $1072 at Messicks in the US.
There is a system relief valve built into the loader valve that's set at 1890-2000psi. Shouldn't this protect the casting?
Now, if the drop speed valve was closed completely and one introduced a bounce into a 3 point implement, I can see where a hydraulic shock load could be introduced.
Thermal? I have looked and there is no safety relief, thermal or otherwise, on that tractor's 3pt lift.Rockshaft piston housings normally have a thermal relief valve installed to keep that catastrophe from happening. I advise to check for presence & correct operation of TRV. I also was taught many years ago to lower all hyd attachments when not using or storing tractor.
What do you think the purpose of item 150 in photo below happens to be?Thermal? I have looked and there is no safety relief, thermal or otherwise, on that tractor's 3pt lift.
Dan
I'd be more inclined to suspect that there was a blade or a plow getting caught on something while driving too fast. Casting looks a little light all around. I would expect an inclusion in the sand casting being the stress raiser. Joys of SCUTIf the mower is too big and the fracture is caused by overpressure the hydraulics are poorly designed.
If the fracture is caused by an impact that left the divot @hagrid noticed the problem is operator error.
Dan
Unloading valve for "shockless" position control?What do you think the purpose of item 150 in photo below happens to be?
or...
maybe the mower is too big/ too heavy ?
The whole purpose of the safety valve is to cushion and largely eliminate those huge forces.agree could be cause also maybe in concert with moving too fast over rough ground with implement lifted? the dreaded death bounce.
I have seen more than a couple of times over the years operator going too fast with rear implement lifted off the ground.
Hit a bump or some rough ground with implement lifted especially when moving at too much speed and the implement bounces causing huge forces downward far in excess of weight of implement.
causes expensive ouches' quickly.
You are right and I fixed it. I had brain farts while thinking of welding and heat treating.I’ve never seen cast iron that wasn’t magnetic.…but I’m still young at 75.
I’ve seen two instances of this type damage…both of them by operators who travelled long distances between fields carrying heavy implements up/off the ground…. on of them having “chained” the implement up to the dogbone….the other using the hyds.
That pic looks like a pretty big shredder for that little machine…. but dealers happily sell those combos when they should be recommending larger tractors.
The broken part is the hydraulic cylinder case. Its the top cover on the differential case.I am probably wrong but I was under the impression that the B, LX and Grands use aluminum gear boxes, transmissions, etc. ??
And the L's and MX and M's are cast iron?