Hi-
Over the weekend I was out with my tractor, in the woods, doing some grapple work. I had my Kubota BX1860 in 4wd and everything seemed to be fine.
As I was backing up, I noticed the front, left tire start to spin quite fast (faster than the other tires) and the axle seemed to be making a popping or clicking sound (hard to say as I had my hearing protection in). My wife, who was out with me, also noticed this. I turned around, still in 4wd and the front left tire did the same thing - it actually tore up some of the ground. I didn't go more than 10' and stopped and took it out of 4wd. I immediately took it back to the shed and parked it and checked the front axle fluid, which seemed normal.
Yesterday I used the loader to raise the front end off of the ground, turn the tractor off, and then proceeded to put the transmission into 'rabbit'. After doing this I rotated each tire, which freely spun independent of each other. I then put the 4wd lever into 4wd and tried the same 'test' with the same result; both tires were spinning independently of each other. This makes me feel like something is wrong and I now have a 2wd tractor. Am I doing this test incorrectly? Is there something else I should do to validate that the 4wd drive isn't hosed? What should I be looking at to diagnose? I don't really relish the thought of pulling the front axle apart :-(
If the 4wd is broken am I harming anything by continuing to use the tractor without it - leaving it in the disengaged position? Honestly, I don't know if I can afford to fix this right now, but anticipate needing to use the tractor.
Thanks for any help!
Over the weekend I was out with my tractor, in the woods, doing some grapple work. I had my Kubota BX1860 in 4wd and everything seemed to be fine.
As I was backing up, I noticed the front, left tire start to spin quite fast (faster than the other tires) and the axle seemed to be making a popping or clicking sound (hard to say as I had my hearing protection in). My wife, who was out with me, also noticed this. I turned around, still in 4wd and the front left tire did the same thing - it actually tore up some of the ground. I didn't go more than 10' and stopped and took it out of 4wd. I immediately took it back to the shed and parked it and checked the front axle fluid, which seemed normal.
Yesterday I used the loader to raise the front end off of the ground, turn the tractor off, and then proceeded to put the transmission into 'rabbit'. After doing this I rotated each tire, which freely spun independent of each other. I then put the 4wd lever into 4wd and tried the same 'test' with the same result; both tires were spinning independently of each other. This makes me feel like something is wrong and I now have a 2wd tractor. Am I doing this test incorrectly? Is there something else I should do to validate that the 4wd drive isn't hosed? What should I be looking at to diagnose? I don't really relish the thought of pulling the front axle apart :-(
If the 4wd is broken am I harming anything by continuing to use the tractor without it - leaving it in the disengaged position? Honestly, I don't know if I can afford to fix this right now, but anticipate needing to use the tractor.
Thanks for any help!