Figured I may as well start a thread on this project.
The unit had tons of slop in the lower end so I disassembled it and found the following.
Decided to put in new lower bearings and new chains along w/a general clean up to good operating condition for this seasons work.
Many parts were acquired from Charlie and some locally as well. Pictures should be self explanatory. Any questions just give me a shout. First up was removing the tine tubes. Very difficult as they had probably never been removed.
Make sure to get a good solid weld all the way around. I used a 7/8" fine thread gr 5 bolt and nut here. The 1/4" wall tine tube made welding in on a snap. I dropped a 10" piece of 1" shafting in the tube to bottom out on the main tiller shaft prior to welding on the nut, and then drove the bolt in w/my 1" air ratchet. When I got to the end of the threads, I simply backed out bolt and added a short piece of 3/4" round and repeated the operation. Had to do this twice due to the limited length of the threads on my bolt and had to use smaller round to fit through the nut, remember I used a piece of 1' shafting to begin with. This thing fought me all the way out despite repeated heating w/the torch and soaking w/penetrant.
upon splitting the case, this is what greeted me. It's no doubt where the slop was originating from.
TIP: Polish all the shafts before attempting to remove the bearings. Too much prying and berating will distort the case when prying the bearings & retainers off.
I will address this repair in my next update.
The unit had tons of slop in the lower end so I disassembled it and found the following.
Decided to put in new lower bearings and new chains along w/a general clean up to good operating condition for this seasons work.
Many parts were acquired from Charlie and some locally as well. Pictures should be self explanatory. Any questions just give me a shout. First up was removing the tine tubes. Very difficult as they had probably never been removed.
Make sure to get a good solid weld all the way around. I used a 7/8" fine thread gr 5 bolt and nut here. The 1/4" wall tine tube made welding in on a snap. I dropped a 10" piece of 1" shafting in the tube to bottom out on the main tiller shaft prior to welding on the nut, and then drove the bolt in w/my 1" air ratchet. When I got to the end of the threads, I simply backed out bolt and added a short piece of 3/4" round and repeated the operation. Had to do this twice due to the limited length of the threads on my bolt and had to use smaller round to fit through the nut, remember I used a piece of 1' shafting to begin with. This thing fought me all the way out despite repeated heating w/the torch and soaking w/penetrant.
upon splitting the case, this is what greeted me. It's no doubt where the slop was originating from.
TIP: Polish all the shafts before attempting to remove the bearings. Too much prying and berating will distort the case when prying the bearings & retainers off.
I will address this repair in my next update.