OP
1930
Platinum Member
- Joined
- Sep 9, 2018
- Messages
- 920
- Location
- Brandon/Ocala Florida
- Tractor
- Kubota B6100E Kubota L 2501 Kubota T1460
I had read that in a previous threead but there wasnt any info on who the third party was, thanksSuggest you look over the Lonestar Wheel Weight web site.
Wheel Weights - Lonestar Weights
Kubota and other manufacturers were often buying third party products and marketing them as factory stuff.
Dave M7040
It is tightening however the wheels are still wobblyAre you actually tightening the bolt? (or is it stripped and just spinning?) the spring acts as sort of a lock washer and is supposed to prevent it from vibrating lose...
I understand now that I was correct in what I had noticed and that was that not only are my pins worn but also the wheel itself and most prob the axle. Its not stupid sloppy but Im used to working on more precision tolerancesI suspect with the pins in place ( not all worn) and the securing bolt tightened, the wheel should be secure.
Investing $13 in two new pins would seem wise
Dave M7040
Consider it done than. Its no problemThe chances of finding OEM wheel weight bolts, for a bizarre set up like you have, is about zero. Myself I would buy long enough normal bolts, You could grind large washers to custom fit the rim, then weld it to the bolt head, and insert them from the inside of the rim. That would make it so you just have to use one wrench to remove the weights.
Tractors in pretty good shape in my opinion, Im assuming not many around cause of all the attention it gets when I take it out somewhere, Id like to preserve whats left with correct parts if avail, I have lots of other projects that Ive spent alot of time exercising my ingenuity on.The pins are typically sloppy even when new. The compression bolt with the spring is what tightens the wheel to the axle. Still, that wheel fixing system wasn't the best system for holding the wheel firmly. It isn't in use on many - if any - modern tractors. And never was popular or much used on tractors much larger than yours.
It's an inexpensive way to hold the wheel on and it won't let the wheel slide along the length of the axle if the pins and their keepers were in place. But they were known to be a bit wobbly. It is what it is. There are ways to shim it to work a bit better, but if you put in the pins and tighten that bolt it will get you by.
BTW, you can buy bolts to mount those weights at any hardware store. Yes, the heads will be too big to fit. That's not a problem, simply grind the heads until they fit.
The whole point of having an older tractor like this is that it gives you a chance to exercise your creative mechanical side. I'm betting you are way ahead of me and that you started seeing that with that ridiculously expenseve air filter spring.
Being able to understand when you can legitimately use a simple solution is half the fun of old tractors.... and exercising your ingenuity on a nice little older tractor is a great way to learn mechanics the right way. Pretty soon you will not only be making the simple parts yourself, but some of them are going to be better than the originals.
good luck, rScotty
You give some of the best detailed responses. thanks