CobyRupert
Super Member
7’ Frontier mower. I ran the mower for first time in 2 -3 months, THEN I decided to check the gearbox oil level (I know). Oil level was fine, but oil looks milky. How did water get in? Or has it always been there?
5 years ago, I changed the input shaft seal because, vent/filler bolt was plugged, and unvented it pushed oil out the input shaft seal (on hot days).
I’m pretty sure I drained most, if not all, of the oil out at that time with a suction hose, and refilled with new oil.
When I checked oil BEFORE the last time using it and before turning it on, oil level was fine and oil was clear. I’ve noticed no oil leaks outside of gearbox. Vent is working fine. I store mower outside but cover the gear box with a plastic John Deere garden cart.
Would oil get water just from the gearbox “breathing” through the vent over a period of months? Years? Could water be in gear box for years, but I don’t notice it at the beginning of the year when it’s not stirred up? And my dipstick only touches the top layers? I’m mystified.
5 years ago, I changed the input shaft seal because, vent/filler bolt was plugged, and unvented it pushed oil out the input shaft seal (on hot days).
I’m pretty sure I drained most, if not all, of the oil out at that time with a suction hose, and refilled with new oil.
When I checked oil BEFORE the last time using it and before turning it on, oil level was fine and oil was clear. I’ve noticed no oil leaks outside of gearbox. Vent is working fine. I store mower outside but cover the gear box with a plastic John Deere garden cart.
Would oil get water just from the gearbox “breathing” through the vent over a period of months? Years? Could water be in gear box for years, but I don’t notice it at the beginning of the year when it’s not stirred up? And my dipstick only touches the top layers? I’m mystified.
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