TSMART
Silver Member
My 224 with 6 ft finish mower is now 4 years old. How often should oil be changed in the finish mower transfer case? i have never changed it...What kind of oil to use? Hot climate here, central florida.
I'd definitely consider using 85W140 down there, maybe even straight 140W. I don't like how thin the original 80W90 gets in the July/August heat, so I use 85W140.My 224 with 6 ft finish mower is now 4 years old. How often should oil be changed in the finish mower transfer case? i have never changed it...What kind of oil to use? Hot climate here, central florida.
How often should oil be changed in the finish mower transfer case? i have never changed it...What kind of oil to use? Hot climate here, central florida.
Not much, cuz the fill level is only about halfway up the housing. Mine takes less than a quart.Now I wonder how much oil is in that case.
I think you meant to type either AW46 or AW68, and they're both in 20W territory. If you want 30W, you have to move up to AW100.Unless it is extreme, like having to constantly steer right or left, I would not worry about it. If you have a separate steer oil resevoir and pump you could go to a heavier hydraulic oil like AW-64 (30W) and it should help with some of the bypassing.
TSMART has one pump, the steering circuit is paralleled off the main loop. You and I have dedicated circuits for steering only. Yet neither of my current tractors have ever exhibited this tendency: >500 hours between them. I respectfully suggest that your steering cylinder may be bypassing intermittently as well.I've had the same steering symptoms as you for 3 years now and at times even the "round and round" as he describes,
I have to agree with you Greg.TSMART has one pump, the steering circuit is paralleled off the main loop. You and I have dedicated circuits for steering only. Yet neither of my current tractors have ever exhibited this tendency: >500 hours between them. I respectfully suggest that your steering cylinder may be bypassing intermittently as well.
Like I said, some folks follow the philosophy "if it works.....", but I'd personally rather fix before failure.
//greg//
Nope, I believe what you're describing is simply the steering controller, located at the bottom of the steering wheel column. Based upon input from the steering wheel, it controls the direction of flow to/from the steering cylinder. Turn the steering wheel to the right > fluid flows TO the cylinder via one line/returns via the other > cylinder extends > the tires move to the right in proportion to the input. Turn the steering wheel in the other direction > flow in those two lines is reversed > cylinder retracts > tires reverse direction in proportion to the input.I presume the pump loop is a power assist to the cylinder loop.
I was looking for the answer myself, which one is bypassing?Nope, I believe what you're describing is simply the steering controller, located at the bottom of the steering wheel column. Based upon input from the steering wheel, it controls the direction of flow to/from the steering cylinder. Turn the steering wheel to the right > fluid flows TO the cylinder via one line/returns via the other > cylinder extends > the tires move to the right in proportion to the input. Turn the steering wheel in the other direction > flow in those two lines is reversed > cylinder retracts > tires reverse direction in proportion to the input.
Anyway - to address your question - yes. When considering whether the steering cylinder or the steering controller is bypassing, the odds definitely favor the cylinder. Besides, it's a helluva lot easier to put a seal kit in a cylinder, than it is to remove and troubleshoot the controller.
//greg//