Matt,
Thanks. I went back this AM and undid all the connectors and started over. I got it done, all in and fully seated. Know what else....
I grasped five things today. 1. A forty year old tractor may be built like a brick outhouse and better than many other outhouses, but it still is an outhouse. It does the job, but it ain’t particularly user friendly. Mine was built in the 1970’s by Americans, steeped in tradition who had no idea that new and other ways of building things were going to make the way they did things obsolete. 2. The engineering to do the work is superb but they used slide rule and hand drafting and there were no desktop computers to provide CAD. The ease of maintaining the item and complete documentation for self maintenance they couldn’t have cared less about. A simple bolt hole moved a ½ inch or being capable of reaching an item from the top rather than from the bottom where it was hidden by covers would never have occurred to them. Using the old assembly line items were placed in sequence, if access was later down the line made more difficult then that is the way it was. In addition, photos and detailed specifications on illustrations was just not the norm. 3. You can’t expect things to just fit on a forty years old Cub Cadet. Sometimes you need another person, a hammer, pry bar, and metal clamps to get things lined up. There is some heavy steel in there and babying it just won’t get the job done. 4. You need access to a whole variety of tools if you are going to do the work on your own. You had better be equipped or you might as well let it rust out in the field. Things are tight and I was trying to save a few bucks. With all of your help I am. But to do it I bet I used an easy $1000 dollars worth of tools what with floor jacks, jack stands, clamps, screwdrivers, sockets, several styles of wrenches, impact tools, air compressor, taps, chemicals, sheers and drill press, lights, etc. Working on a Cub Cadet is not for the "all my tools in a plastic suitcase" person 5. I’m not afraid of anything on the front of my 1450. If something goes wrong I’m willing to go after it. Electrical and carburetion may still be new to me but after this I know what I will have to go through and I’m willing to go for it.