Frank
Member
After 80 hours I traded my BX2200 in for a BX22. The BX22 has a hydraulic-like whine that was not present with the BX2200. It seems a little more high pitched than the normal hydraulic sounds of the tractor.
It's not present during the first minute or so of warm-up. But after a few minutes it starts, at first intermittant - like morse code - then becomes constant after another 1-2 minutes.
I've got a mechanics stethascope that I use for diagnosing problems on cars. With the scope, the noise seems to be loudest when I put the probe on the right side (from driver's perspective) of the transmission housing, just in front of the rear tire.
I've tried moving the steering, loader joystick, 3-point hitch lever, but the sound appears to be unaffected.
After 16 hours, everything else seems to be working fine, but I'm concerned that some extra wear or damage may be occuring that will manifest itself down the road. This noise was definetly NOT present on the BX2200.
Has anyone else experienced this? Is there something new in the BX22 design that makes this normal?
Any tractor mechanics out there that have run into this before?
Thanks in advance for any help you can give.
Frank
It's not present during the first minute or so of warm-up. But after a few minutes it starts, at first intermittant - like morse code - then becomes constant after another 1-2 minutes.
I've got a mechanics stethascope that I use for diagnosing problems on cars. With the scope, the noise seems to be loudest when I put the probe on the right side (from driver's perspective) of the transmission housing, just in front of the rear tire.
I've tried moving the steering, loader joystick, 3-point hitch lever, but the sound appears to be unaffected.
After 16 hours, everything else seems to be working fine, but I'm concerned that some extra wear or damage may be occuring that will manifest itself down the road. This noise was definetly NOT present on the BX2200.
Has anyone else experienced this? Is there something new in the BX22 design that makes this normal?
Any tractor mechanics out there that have run into this before?
Thanks in advance for any help you can give.
Frank