Is repairing the bushings on a backhoe like this doable for someone without a mill/lathe? I do have a cutting torch (not that good with it yet) and a welder.
The bushings for both swing cylinders, as well as a couple bushings near the bucket are pretty wallered (oval shaped). I'm curious how shops normally fix this. Do they find the closest round bushing that will fit, and weld up the gaps? Or do they bore it out to the smallest round hole, then but a bushing in?
I'm also curious why Kubota decided to have the bushings be the wear items instead of the pins. Almost all but one pin shows very little wear, but the bushings are shot. Why wouldn't they use harder bushings and softer pins since pins are vastly easier to change?
Thanks for your help,
John
The bushings for both swing cylinders, as well as a couple bushings near the bucket are pretty wallered (oval shaped). I'm curious how shops normally fix this. Do they find the closest round bushing that will fit, and weld up the gaps? Or do they bore it out to the smallest round hole, then but a bushing in?
I'm also curious why Kubota decided to have the bushings be the wear items instead of the pins. Almost all but one pin shows very little wear, but the bushings are shot. Why wouldn't they use harder bushings and softer pins since pins are vastly easier to change?
Thanks for your help,
John