While mowing a hillside area, I hit what I suspect was a mole hill in some taller grass. It's hard to understand what exactly happened, but the inner rim/lip of the mower deck (RCK60B-23BX) was dented upwards to the extent that it made blade contact in two spots
It's pretty thick steel, so I can't just take some pliers or whatnot to try to bend it back down by hand (not that it stopped me from trying out of frustration), and the low clearance under the deck makes it impossible to hammer down. I was able to file a bit of it away to provide just enough clearance for the blades, but there really should be much more clearance.
Any suggestions before just taking an angle grinder to the dented parts?
Separately, it seems that the two halves of the blade clear the dents differently, with one half having maybe a 1mm more clearance over the dent than the other (which has close to zero), meaning that one side is bent down/up with respect to the other. Not sure if anyone thinks that is significant enough for concern (I know that folks go to great lengths in balancing their blades, and clearly there's something out of balance here).
I'd post a picture but I reattached the deck to see whether it was good enough to test out (thankfully it was), and if I'm honest, it takes me far more time and effort than I'd like to admit to get the the deck on and off.
It's pretty thick steel, so I can't just take some pliers or whatnot to try to bend it back down by hand (not that it stopped me from trying out of frustration), and the low clearance under the deck makes it impossible to hammer down. I was able to file a bit of it away to provide just enough clearance for the blades, but there really should be much more clearance.
Any suggestions before just taking an angle grinder to the dented parts?
Separately, it seems that the two halves of the blade clear the dents differently, with one half having maybe a 1mm more clearance over the dent than the other (which has close to zero), meaning that one side is bent down/up with respect to the other. Not sure if anyone thinks that is significant enough for concern (I know that folks go to great lengths in balancing their blades, and clearly there's something out of balance here).
I'd post a picture but I reattached the deck to see whether it was good enough to test out (thankfully it was), and if I'm honest, it takes me far more time and effort than I'd like to admit to get the the deck on and off.