What did you do to your Implement today

billrigsby

Well-known member

Equipment
L1500DT Too many implements, or is there such a thing?
Mar 17, 2015
1,003
152
63
Florissant CO USA 8213'
www.facebook.com
I was amazed as to how easy it all came apart, considering all the rust (one snapped bolt) :mad:.
An update on progress. :)

A little premature on that statement:mad:, the safety door (which is missing) hinges, are completely rusted into one piece. So replacements are in order.....

A few hinges of the correct dimensions, just modified a bit.

One half of the drive shaft was missing.....

Gathered that together and now ready for paint.


Got new seals and bearings


Gathered new hardware for reassembly, most all is stainless steel


And new Cat1 pins




 

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billrigsby

Well-known member

Equipment
L1500DT Too many implements, or is there such a thing?
Mar 17, 2015
1,003
152
63
Florissant CO USA 8213'
www.facebook.com

Got all the attachment and miscellaneous pieces primed and painted today,





Got the sheet metal covers cleaned up a bit, paint tomorrow




Also got all the tines removed from the tine shaft, no easy task,
some people have just never heard of anti-seize !! :confused::(




Picked up a piece of 1/8" plate for the safety door that was missing.




Moving along pretty good. :D

 

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billrigsby

Well-known member

Equipment
L1500DT Too many implements, or is there such a thing?
Mar 17, 2015
1,003
152
63
Florissant CO USA 8213'
www.facebook.com
Man, I like your threads Bill. Great work.
Thanks :rolleyes:

Been so busy with other stuff, but this is the latest on this project....

Got all the covers primered and painted Kubota Orange



Got the tine shaft primered with Rust Reformer and painted Gloss Black


Got the hinges and safety door welded up


and found a NOS cover gasket on EBay


and .....


 

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D2Cat

Well-known member
Lifetime Member

Equipment
L305DT, B7100HST, TG1860, TG1860D, L4240
Mar 27, 2014
13,054
4,416
113
40 miles south of Kansas City
Bill, that's good! Do you make those decals yourself? Do you design them on your computer? What kind of material, cost? Thanks
 

billrigsby

Well-known member

Equipment
L1500DT Too many implements, or is there such a thing?
Mar 17, 2015
1,003
152
63
Florissant CO USA 8213'
www.facebook.com
Bill, that's good! Do you make those decals yourself? Do you design them on your computer? What kind of material, cost? Thanks


Yes I do the artwork on the computer and have a sign shop print them on vinyl,
as an example, these were for my little dump trailer,
3 of the top one and 2 of the bottom one, $50.00 + tax




 

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billrigsby

Well-known member

Equipment
L1500DT Too many implements, or is there such a thing?
Mar 17, 2015
1,003
152
63
Florissant CO USA 8213'
www.facebook.com
Well! Six years later, I am finally finishing the John Deere 35 Rotary Tiller.

Everything is painted and reassembled;
61 Light coat of primer.JPG

62 Inside black, outside orange.JPG

63 Inside black, outside orange.JPG

65 Bearing flanges primered.JPG

69 Time for reassembly.JPG

72 Tine shaft installed.JPG

74 Gasket and tensioner in place.JPG

78 Cover installed.JPG

82 Gearbox cover and hitch installed.JPG

20231112_150618_1600x1200.jpg


Tomorrow I plan on mounting to the tractor and sizing the driveshaft to the correct length.
 
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billrigsby

Well-known member

Equipment
L1500DT Too many implements, or is there such a thing?
Mar 17, 2015
1,003
152
63
Florissant CO USA 8213'
www.facebook.com
Got the nuts and bolts for the tine re-installation, last warm day for a while so lets go,
Tiller at a good 'working height'.
92 Ready to re-install tines.jpg


Everything set out and....
93 Ready to re-install tines.jpg


....ready to go.
94 Ready to re-install tines.jpg


72 nuts and bolt later!
95 Tines re-installed.jpg


Be glad to have this done and out of the shop, six years later, still need one decal.
 
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DustyRusty

Well-known member

Equipment
2020 BX23S, BX2822 Snowblower, Curtis Deluxe Cab,
Nov 8, 2015
5,255
3,879
113
North East CT
I really needed to bush hog the paths through my 9 acres of woods, the tractor has been out of commission for over 2 years. My 60" rotary cutter had bee sitting in the dirt for at least that long as well. I hauled it into the shop to assess the damage to the implement. The previous owner stored everything under a tree and it was caked in mud and leaves when I purchased it. I used it for 2 years in pretty rough condition.

Well the 2 years that I have let it sit didn't do the thing any favors. Top deck rusted through in multiple areas. Rear wheel wouldn't pivot on the caster. Bearings in rear wheel completely worn out, one side was missing the balls in the bearing. Gearbox was dry, no fluid.

I got the rear caster pivot to break free and start to mover with a pipe wrench. Greased it all up and that works now. The rear wheel assembly needs replacing. I can weld new deck steel without too much difficulty, only time which I don't have much of with the new baby.

I filled the gearbox with 80W-90 and it came out the bottom as fast as I could pour it in, the bottom seal is completely blown out. I really wanted to use the implement is I could get it to at least a useable state, so my neighbor recommended an old farmers trick, pump the gear box full of bearing grease then add a little gear oil to make a pudding type consistency. That seemed to hold.

I used it very carefuly and taking multiple breaks to try and not heat up the gearbox too much, and it seems to work ok.

My question is this, since I essentially need to repair the entire unit, repair or replace? I need to:
1) Rebuild the Gearbox, at least new seals
2) Weld new deck together
3) Replace rear wheel assembly - Roughly $80 locally at TSC
4) Still have a 20 year old unit that has been abused.

Thoughts? New or Used Replacement? Keep using it as is and repair over winter when time may be more available?
The original owner didn't take care of it, and you should have fixed it before using it when you first got it. When I read things like "The previous owner stored everything under a tree and it was caked in mud and leaves when I purchased it. I used it for 2 years in pretty rough condition." all that I can think of is the second owner is just as bad as the first owner because you didn't fix what it needed until it was trashed. My opinion is you should just find another beat-up brush hog and beat the snot out of it until it stops working, and then buy another and keep the cycle going.
 
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