Rear axle broke right inside cover

smallfarmer

New member
Apr 21, 2013
12
0
0
Clayton, WI
I am looking for any thoughts advice on why my rear axle would have broke right inside the cover, between the bearings and nut. I was plowing and I hear a crack and then the tractor would not move forward. At first I thought it was a transmission problem but I tried locking the differential and then I could move forward. I got out and saw the right wheel at the axle seal was leaking.

So took off the whole wheel / assembly and yep, it broke just about an inch inside the axle hub. Lucky to not have been under or in the tractor when it fell. As it was, we had it jacked up when we took off the tire and it was just shocking to see how little of the axle shaft was holding it up...

Any thoughts on why that would happen? My tractor is a 1979 M4000. Thanks.
 

ETRon

New member

Equipment
M6040
Aug 4, 2010
128
0
0
Tellico Plains, TN
Age and metal fatigue are what comes to mind. Just outside the bearings is the highest stress point (IMHO). After 34 years or so, if it's been worked hard I'm not sure you can hardly fault it. Should be able to find a replacement in a tractor graveyard.
 

hodge

Well-known member
Lifetime Member

Equipment
John Deere 790 John Deere 310 backhoe Bobcat 743
Nov 19, 2010
2,906
453
83
Love, VA
X2. Age, fatigue, and how many different people have used the tractor in those years? Not everyone respects machinery and drives it accordingly. Some people could break an anvil with a rubber mallet- who knows how they treated your tractor? I'm not accusing, just generalizing. 34 years is a lot of time and use- the older a piece of equipment gets, the more likely it is that something will break.
you might try West Kentucky Tractor Parts (wkytpstore.com) they have a tractor graveyard.
 
Last edited:

olthumpa

Active member
Lifetime Member

Equipment
L275
May 25, 2011
1,501
3
38
Maine
X2. Age, fatigue, and how many different people have used the tractor in those years? Not everyone respects machinery and drives it accordingly. Some people could break an anvil with a rubber mallet- who knows how they treated your tractor? I'm not accusing, just generalizing. 34 years is a lot of time and use- the older a piece of equipment gets, the more likely it is that something will break.
you might try West Kentucky Tractor Parts (wkytpstore.com) they have a tractor graveyard.
I have had good luck getting scarce parts from them.

Good luck!