Yep. Clean the hole and edges larger than the damaged area… Use fine-wire screen properly cut slightly over-sized…and pre-treated with thin-coating of JB Weld (for subsequent adhesion) inserted thru the hole, held/suspended with a safety-wire tied to the screen’s center in-order to pull and to hold it in-place…. while the JB Weld is spatulated into place and adhering to the pre-treated JB Weld-penetrated screen. (I hope it’s obvious that the “KWIK” version of JB Weld would not likely be the best choice.)I think for $570 bucks - I would find a way to "cover" the hole.
In the photo it looks like it has been painted over ?
That cast will need to be cleaned as mentioned above - and then paint ground off ( all the while keeping debris out the hole) then a patch to prevent the JB weld from entering the hole.
Mike,View attachment 121386 L2600dt Can anyone steer me in a direction to find this top cover?
It does look painted over, maybe it was a bad repair from previous owner. I’m not sure as it is the first tractor I have owned.I think for $570 bucks - I would find a way to "cover" the hole.
In the photo it looks like it has been painted over ?
That cast will need to be cleaned as mentioned above - and then paint ground off ( all the while keeping debris out the hole) then a patch to prevent the JB weld from entering the hole.
Thank youUsed Rockshaft Housing fits Kubota L2350 L2600 L3000 32412-37110 32412-37112
Rockshaft Housing for Kubota Tractor(s) L2350, L2600, L3000. Replaces Kubota OEM Number(s) 32412-37110, Replaces Kubota Casting Number(s) 32412-37112.www.tractorpartsasap.com
This is what I am thinking of trying, my concern is the patch would be at an Oring contact point and may cause leaking issues.Yep. Clean the hole and edges larger than the damaged area… Use fine-wire screen properly cut slightly over-sized…and pre-treated with thin-coating of JB Weld (for subsequent adhesion) inserted thru the hole, held/suspended with a safety-wire tied to the screen’s center in-order to pull and to hold it in-place…. while the JB Weld is spatulated into place and adhering to the pre-treated JB Weld-penetrated screen. (I hope it’s obvious that the “KWIK” version of JB Weld would not likely be the best choice.)
Anyway…. that’s how I repaired a hole in a 9N Ford block and it held up for the 15 years I owned/operated it….and I doubt the new owner is even aware of the repair because it was virtually invisible after it was painted. (No… I did not “hide” the repair from the new owner…. I gave the little Ford away, and it was subsequently sold to a new owner.)
If you call them I would be interested in knowing if they actually have that part.Thank you
I’m gonna try to order tomorrow. Sure will let you know.If you call them I would be interested in knowing if they actually have that part.
Dan
Not sure what caused the weak spot, tractor was running and popped following fluid shooting in the air. I just bought it, so do not know the history.Pretty sure this is the cover. Broken part at the back. A few online if this is it but around 500-600canadian doll hairs. I also thought the hole looked like it had been painted but figured it was just the camera light. Having the piece might help in a patch situation. I’d try what other suggested first with the Jb weld. Can’t hurt to try it. If it fails then locate a new or undamaged one. Looks like it’s broken under the 3ph flow adjustment on the hydraulic cover.
I am also pretty interested in how this broke.