I bought a lock on coupler for my air powered grease gun. No more fighting the grease going in. Worked great as u only need one hand now and even a stubborn fitting will have to take the grease.
Curious, did replacing the pin solve the noise issue? I have the same noise from the same general location on my BH92. I've greased the heck out of it but the grease seems to only extrude from the right side of the joint. After greasing, the noise returns soon after use. Thanks!It is still under warranty. While I had the dipper cylinder decoupled I was not able to move dipper arm because the bucket was supported by the ground. Previously with no pressure and engine off and pulling dipper lever I was able to move Arm +| - 2” from a resting position and no noise.
Ordered pins, zerks, spacers and grease lock-on device for grease gun. for this pivot position.
You all have been great. Like good neighbors! I really appreciate your guidance and suggestions.
Next I will replace zerk.
Any further detail on scenario to replace the pin? Laying arm flat on wood while it is attached to tractor? How about using new pin to push out old pin ( but don’t want to mushroom new pin). Type of hammer? I like the idea of a socket head. But, needs to be easier to move than first time or I will change orientation because something must still be creating a load on pin.
Thanks
My BH70 with thumb had the wrong pin, length was wrong and it wasn't drilled for grease. You might want to pull the pin and see if it is just another screwup out of the Georgia plant, and your dealer didn't catch it.Curious, did replacing the pin solve the noise issue? I have the same noise from the same general location on my BH92. I've greased the heck out of it but the grease seems to only extrude from the right side of the joint. After greasing, the noise returns soon after use. Thanks!
Thanks for the reply. I just got off the phone with the dealer's mechanic. He suggested that I also take a look at the pin as you suggested. He said that sometimes they don't get enough grease on the whole pin at the factory, then it rusts on one side causing the grease not to flow evenly from side to side.My BH70 with thumb had the wrong pin, length was wrong and it wasn't drilled for grease. You might want to pull the pin and see if it is just another screwup out of the Georgia plant, and your dealer didn't catch it.
Thanks for the reply Lynnmore. The cylinder didn't appear to be bent, but very hard to tell with the naked eye. I may hold my level up to it and see if there are any noticeable gaps.Can't tell for sure from a photo, but it appears that the dipper cylinder may be bent, also, the dipper may be bent. You need to disassemble both parts and have a machine shop inspect them checking for straightness and holes not being perpendicular. Continuing to operate with bent parts will cause rapid wear. I wouldn't trust the manufacturer to produce quality parts or a dealer to properly inspect them.
Thanks for the reply GreensvilleJay. It could be more likely than not, that I did bend the dipper arm somehow. I have used the backhoe to reposition the tractor multiple times while digging. I will definitely make it a point NOT to do that anymore. I picked up that technique from Dad when he had his John Deere 310 backhoe. I suppose those heavy duty purpose build machines are build to take it.Could damage (bends ) have been caused by using the bucket to 'whack' something like a tree stump or 'aggressively' turning/moving tractor with the backhoe ???
hard to tell in pictures, but my old eyes don't see the cylinder/ram being bent rather the boom or arm or dipper stick......whatever the orange steel is called....