starter replaced at a surprise to me good price. (less than 100 bucks) and it is a
gear reduction starter. Took a good bit of part number cross referencing to find starter that "should fit" (and did) based on cross references. Ordering by engine model for what appeared to be same type delco remy starter that has not changed in design since it was chosen by company that put this engine in its original home back in 1957.... was over three large bills. Glad took the time to search it. Ended up with better starter, for less than third of the price. Spins the engine fast so she fires right up.
Not sure how tired the shear pin in the drive shaft yoke where it installs on the flywheel end was..... but starter may have spun everything too well. You see; one design flaw? said about this old Uniloader is the transmission and hydraulic pumps are always connected. So when you crank engine... your spinning those parts too; thusss the forces going on when starting are higher than just diesel compression.. Appears that; along with old wear of yoke on engine side, it snapped the shear pin (just a grade 5? bolt). The crankshaft yoke has no splines or key... just the shear pin/bolt thru it and yoke. Yoke's holes for this bolt though are waddled out a bit. This likely didn't help.. suspect that gave it more snap at initial start up as it spun all those items and caused the shear pin bolt to snap and fall out.
when test drove before buying and having it delivered to my house; it all worked fairly well, but starter. . So now that this is solved; will put a grade 8 bolt for shear pin in it tomorrow. Will then get more test driving and light practice in. Once got that practice in; will replace or repair the yoke and go back with a grade 5 shear pin/bolt.
This skid steer was reworked a few owners ago.. more than just engine swap to this old Waukesha diesel was done. What was also modified was the two levers. These levers are used for both steer-locomotion AND for curling bucket; along with up-down of lift arms. in OEM form .... when lever(s) pulled/pushed this put power to wheels for "skid steering" and fwd and reverse locomotion. Left/right of one lever curled the bucket... and left/right of other lever moved the lift arm up/down. Think by watching videos; this is pretty standard still today. I've never used a skid steer. Anyway.... lever control is the part that was reworked...... the bucket curl and lift arm control are now two foot pedals with a toe forward and a heel down action to control bucket curl and lift arms. Levers only operate steer/locomotion. Fine with me...... having never driven one anyway..... it wont change my learning curve I do not think.
side note... kinda cool in that it has a hydraulically adjustable cvt as part of the transmission system.
not the one I bought......... same model