I just purchased a B6000 with rototiller (this will be it's primary use). I know nothing about the tractor, and I'm not certain the prior owner gave me very good instructions. Some maintenance is required:
1) The battery is no good. Voltage at 10.5 after running for quite a while. I am planning to replace it. I found a replacement car battery (450 or 520 cranking amps). Same dimensions as the one in the tractor now. Will this be sufficient? Is there any way to know whether the problem was as a result of the alternator/voltage regulator? Or should I just stick a new one in and hope for the best?
2) I drove the tractor home (about 1.5 miles). Halfway home I discovered a red light on above the key. Is this a low oil pressure light? Does it serve any other function i.e. temperature? I probably should have stopped, but I wasn't certain what it was, I wasn't certain if it was on the whole time, it was getting dark, the road was busy, and I had no means to restart (i.e. battery dead).
3) I just removed the hood so I could get a good look at the coolant level. I added about a gallon, and then spotted a leak in the lower hose. I'm pretty certain the tractor had absolutely no coolant for the 15 to 25 minutes it was running when I drove it home. It seemed to run fine - I noticed a slight surge in RPM's (i.e. it would gain or lose some). I thought it might be a govenor, but I don't even know if the tractor has one. Just before I arrived home, I stalled the tractor going through a gate. I was in too high of a gear. I got the clutch depressed well before the engine died, but it didn't seem to want to recover after I had "lugged" the RPM's down. I then brought the car to boost it, and I got it running about 20 minutes later. It turned over easy i.e. it wasn't seized. No paint burned off cylinders. Do you think I got lucky? Is there anything I can check to see if I did damage? I'm upset because I asked the prior owner if the water was good, and he told me it was. Could this be related to the light coming on?
4) I found the oil dipstick. Well hidden! Found that the prior owner had overfilled it. I doubt he knew there was a dipstick, because it looks like he probably filled it to the top of the fill cap. Oil was 3/4 of the way up the dipstick. Could this create any problems? Could it be related to the light coming on? The tractor was spewing oil through one of the overflow hoses, so I had a suspicion I would find it overfilled.
5) The prior owner showed me how to start the tractor. But I have suspicions I wasn't taught correctly. That is because I discovered you can turn the switch counter clockwise - I suspect this preheats the glow plugs? I asked him how to heat the glow plugs, but he said you just turn the key on, and then crank. When I turn the switch counter clockwise, smoke comes from the dash. I traced the smoke to a little resitor (or coil) I can see through a hole in the dash. I suspect it is getting hot and burning years of grease/dust off it. Does this make sense, or should I be concerned about this smoke? How long do you turn it counterclockwise for? Should that resistor glow red before I try to turn the engine over?
Are there any other maintenance items I should check over? I will check the air filter. I suspect there must be some gear oil and transmission oil to check to. Any good website resources for maintenance on the B6000?
Sorry for all of the silly questions. I have an operating manual, but it doesn't seem to answer any of these basic questions!
Thank you in advance,
Chris
1) The battery is no good. Voltage at 10.5 after running for quite a while. I am planning to replace it. I found a replacement car battery (450 or 520 cranking amps). Same dimensions as the one in the tractor now. Will this be sufficient? Is there any way to know whether the problem was as a result of the alternator/voltage regulator? Or should I just stick a new one in and hope for the best?
2) I drove the tractor home (about 1.5 miles). Halfway home I discovered a red light on above the key. Is this a low oil pressure light? Does it serve any other function i.e. temperature? I probably should have stopped, but I wasn't certain what it was, I wasn't certain if it was on the whole time, it was getting dark, the road was busy, and I had no means to restart (i.e. battery dead).
3) I just removed the hood so I could get a good look at the coolant level. I added about a gallon, and then spotted a leak in the lower hose. I'm pretty certain the tractor had absolutely no coolant for the 15 to 25 minutes it was running when I drove it home. It seemed to run fine - I noticed a slight surge in RPM's (i.e. it would gain or lose some). I thought it might be a govenor, but I don't even know if the tractor has one. Just before I arrived home, I stalled the tractor going through a gate. I was in too high of a gear. I got the clutch depressed well before the engine died, but it didn't seem to want to recover after I had "lugged" the RPM's down. I then brought the car to boost it, and I got it running about 20 minutes later. It turned over easy i.e. it wasn't seized. No paint burned off cylinders. Do you think I got lucky? Is there anything I can check to see if I did damage? I'm upset because I asked the prior owner if the water was good, and he told me it was. Could this be related to the light coming on?
4) I found the oil dipstick. Well hidden! Found that the prior owner had overfilled it. I doubt he knew there was a dipstick, because it looks like he probably filled it to the top of the fill cap. Oil was 3/4 of the way up the dipstick. Could this create any problems? Could it be related to the light coming on? The tractor was spewing oil through one of the overflow hoses, so I had a suspicion I would find it overfilled.
5) The prior owner showed me how to start the tractor. But I have suspicions I wasn't taught correctly. That is because I discovered you can turn the switch counter clockwise - I suspect this preheats the glow plugs? I asked him how to heat the glow plugs, but he said you just turn the key on, and then crank. When I turn the switch counter clockwise, smoke comes from the dash. I traced the smoke to a little resitor (or coil) I can see through a hole in the dash. I suspect it is getting hot and burning years of grease/dust off it. Does this make sense, or should I be concerned about this smoke? How long do you turn it counterclockwise for? Should that resistor glow red before I try to turn the engine over?
Are there any other maintenance items I should check over? I will check the air filter. I suspect there must be some gear oil and transmission oil to check to. Any good website resources for maintenance on the B6000?
Sorry for all of the silly questions. I have an operating manual, but it doesn't seem to answer any of these basic questions!
Thank you in advance,
Chris