WES - I'm in the lead! Yes! I've sheared TWO driveshaft pins!
KENDELL - Good luck catching a lathe chuck.....I'll be standing over there behind the solid concrete wall.
Having just been elbow-deep into a Ford 8.8 two weeks ago, SON & I agreed that the wear on the traction-loc clutch plates was what probably caused the side gears & cupcake gears to start failing. As the plates wear the clutches compress which forces the gears to engage closer to the tips of the teeth, not close to the roots.
From what I've heard from pullers the actual failure mode of a CC rearend is the bearing retainer plates, the three bolt triangular retainers breaking. MWSC makes billet alum. replacements that are unbreakable. Also You occasionally hear of a twisted axle, and top splined sliding gear shaft in a GD. But You'll be happly to know the Hydro's seem to be almost indestructable.
Last summer hauling dirt/rock with my big hyd. dump cart on the sleeve hitch adapter on the 982, the adapter moved the hitch pin higher for more complete dumping and further back by a foot, which when loaded put SO much more weight on the 3-point the frt end was often as not off the ground. I almost pulled the mower deck off and put my suitcase weights on the frt. The loaded cart must have put 400-500# on the rear. I was more worried about the hitch on the cart breaking than the 982.
KENDELL - Good luck catching a lathe chuck.....I'll be standing over there behind the solid concrete wall.
Having just been elbow-deep into a Ford 8.8 two weeks ago, SON & I agreed that the wear on the traction-loc clutch plates was what probably caused the side gears & cupcake gears to start failing. As the plates wear the clutches compress which forces the gears to engage closer to the tips of the teeth, not close to the roots.
From what I've heard from pullers the actual failure mode of a CC rearend is the bearing retainer plates, the three bolt triangular retainers breaking. MWSC makes billet alum. replacements that are unbreakable. Also You occasionally hear of a twisted axle, and top splined sliding gear shaft in a GD. But You'll be happly to know the Hydro's seem to be almost indestructable.
Last summer hauling dirt/rock with my big hyd. dump cart on the sleeve hitch adapter on the 982, the adapter moved the hitch pin higher for more complete dumping and further back by a foot, which when loaded put SO much more weight on the 3-point the frt end was often as not off the ground. I almost pulled the mower deck off and put my suitcase weights on the frt. The loaded cart must have put 400-500# on the rear. I was more worried about the hitch on the cart breaking than the 982.