I pull the pto shaft apart and clean the grease off in the fall,
and lube it with various spray lubes makes the shaft much easier to
extend and retract, doose the coupler with the same.
Then repeat in the spring with grease.
Those chains go on quite well and I have had some practice putting them on,
2 to 6 sets once or twice a year, a couple of sets several times a year.
That's what I found with a PTO set. Dig it out, take off current attachment, sometimes all done in the dark. Hook her up, start her up and whalla, utility power comes back on! Put everything back and put attachment back on tractor. Don't get me wrong, it's not a bad thing to have. Depends how spoiled you want to be.
I think one is out of place by 1mm.
Nice job Lou.
Rgds, D.
It makes a surprisingly competitive penetrating lube though even if you don't factor in it's cheap price. A pile of non-commercial reviews support that.Water Dispersant, formula #40.
Not much of a lube (not it's design target) for heavy mechanical systems, but it's great at displacing moisture, and won't interfere with mechanical action even at low temperatures. Decent product for what you describe IT.
I like it for certain things still..... just used some today on a not-that-old Walkman radio that I use outside - I've never seen another battery compartment that likes to green-fuzz the battery terminals so fast... battery not leaking, and terminals are not actually corroded, once you remove the fuzz. Weird problem.
My beef with WD40 is the can...... I prefer an aerosol, and it seems I can barely get through half a can, and it stops spraying. Not even rattle-can paint products give me that kind of trouble !
Rgds, D.
Not that old Walkman radio? Isn't that an oxymoron? :laughing:Water Dispersant, formula #40.
Not much of a lube (not it's design target) for heavy mechanical systems, but it's great at displacing moisture, and won't interfere with mechanical action even at low temperatures. Decent product for what you describe IT.
I like it for certain things still..... just used some today on a not-that-old Walkman radio that I use outside - I've never seen another battery compartment that likes to green-fuzz the battery terminals so fast... battery not leaking, and terminals are not actually corroded, once you remove the fuzz. Weird problem.
My beef with WD40 is the can...... I prefer an aerosol, and it seems I can barely get through half a can, and it stops spraying. Not even rattle-can paint products give me that kind of trouble !
Rgds, D.
The reason is, they have a machine that picks out the reject cans... Those they send to Canada... ha ha haMy beef with WD40 is the can...... I prefer an aerosol, and it seems I can barely get through half a can, and it stops spraying. Not even rattle-can paint products give me that kind of trouble !
Rgds, D.