If I'm not mistaken this was discussed a little while back. @North Idaho Wolfman did a post on how to fix it--I cannot remember the solution but it worked for the OP. May want to search the forum.
Im in the same boat. Luckily my neighbor has a MS362 with a 25 inch bar. He came over and helped me with the bigger stuff and when I was stuck. I'll tell you one thing.... that saw will wear you OUT. It is heavy and a beast to handle.
Cleared...for the most part..... a old damaged tree that fell after the hurricane last week. Only after I stuck my tiny saw in the tree 4-5 times and had to borrow another to cut it out. Let's just say I'm not a lumberjack!
Get rid of the hook. Its useless get this...
https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B083Z7KT23/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o01_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
It allows the cutter to move as it should and easily hooks to every implement.
I added a good bit of play sand in the mixture. If YOU would have taken the time to research the slipping issue BEFORE you started and properly prepared the floor and paint you wouldn't have had to 1/2 a*^ the job by 'roughing it up'. See the sand added to the mixture does the 'roughing' for...
We moved about 18 months ago into a home where we have a 3 car garage. Prior to that we only had carports. Well last weekend I decided to paint the floor with the Epoxyshield and it turned out great....so far (Before and after photos below). After doing that it looked so good I figured i would...
If it moves like that when shut off I'd be scared it could do it when working with stuff in the bucket. I do not think that is normal...at least not on my tractor.
With less than 50 hours I would have the dealer check it out and fix it.
I'm going to check. Thanks for the info.
Do you think this would explain loosening and tightening the banjo bolt causing it to work for a while? Or, do you think that has to do with the washers?
I know that this is a Kubota forum, but I guy I share hunting land with needs some help and cannot seem to find it anywhere else. I thought maybe someone here could help. Anyway, the tractor is a Deere 2020 made in around 1968.
He had a leak on his fuel line. The tip of the line was damaged...
Sound, sound advice. I do not use it in ANY of my small engines including by Yamaha golf cart. I do not have any scientific study but I can tell you folks that use it always have problems and must replace lines yearly.