chowyunmatt
New member
- Joined
- May 31, 2020
- Messages
- 11
- Tractor
- John Deere 2305
Hi All,
I bought a used 2305 this summer, with approx 435 hours on the meter. The guy I bought it from also bought it used, and said he rarely ever used it, put about 10 hours on it. When he first purchased(Sept. 2018), he brought it to the local JD dealer for inspection and routine maintenance. They changed the usual oil and filters, but did not service the front axle(he gave me their itemized work order). I ran the tractor a bit over that last few months, about 10 hours, but never worked it too hard. I decided to go through and change all oil and filters yesterday, to get ready for snow season, which is my main reason for buying the tractor.
I pulled all 3 plugs out of the front axle to let it drain out, into 3 separate buckets. The oil that came out of the left wheel drain(first one I opened) had a good amount of larger metal shavings, and the oil was gray metallic color. I didn't see any large shavings in the other buckets, but all the oil was gray and metallic. I replaced the oil with Amsoil synthetic 75W-90 gear oil, which I am hoping will run better in the cold than a standard 80W-90 which is what the manual calls for. When adding the new oil, I kept the left hand drain plug(opposite the fill port) open to allow some fresh oil to rinse through, about half a quart. When it started coming through mostly clean, I replaced the drain plug, and filled the axle.
I'm assuming that the front axle oil has not been replaced since the tractor was new. I think the manual states that it should be done at 400 hours. Is it normal to see some shavings/metal in the oil like this? Anything I should check on, or anything I can do to get the most life out of this axle possible? Hoping I don't end up with a huge repair bill in the near future.
I bought a used 2305 this summer, with approx 435 hours on the meter. The guy I bought it from also bought it used, and said he rarely ever used it, put about 10 hours on it. When he first purchased(Sept. 2018), he brought it to the local JD dealer for inspection and routine maintenance. They changed the usual oil and filters, but did not service the front axle(he gave me their itemized work order). I ran the tractor a bit over that last few months, about 10 hours, but never worked it too hard. I decided to go through and change all oil and filters yesterday, to get ready for snow season, which is my main reason for buying the tractor.
I pulled all 3 plugs out of the front axle to let it drain out, into 3 separate buckets. The oil that came out of the left wheel drain(first one I opened) had a good amount of larger metal shavings, and the oil was gray metallic color. I didn't see any large shavings in the other buckets, but all the oil was gray and metallic. I replaced the oil with Amsoil synthetic 75W-90 gear oil, which I am hoping will run better in the cold than a standard 80W-90 which is what the manual calls for. When adding the new oil, I kept the left hand drain plug(opposite the fill port) open to allow some fresh oil to rinse through, about half a quart. When it started coming through mostly clean, I replaced the drain plug, and filled the axle.
I'm assuming that the front axle oil has not been replaced since the tractor was new. I think the manual states that it should be done at 400 hours. Is it normal to see some shavings/metal in the oil like this? Anything I should check on, or anything I can do to get the most life out of this axle possible? Hoping I don't end up with a huge repair bill in the near future.