IslandTractor
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Sep 15, 2005
- Messages
- 15,802
- Location
- Prudence Island, RI
- Tractor
- 2007 Kioti DK40se HST, Woods BH
Having busted several clevises on my Caroni 1900 recently during an initial lot clearing, I discovered the sticker shock of buying parts from Agri Supply for this implement. Querying here for options resulted in the sad news known to many of you - nobody seems to have found an alternative for the ridiculously priced $7 metric clevis. That didn't sit well with me...
I may have found a solution. I say "may", as I've not actually tried it yet - but once I've used up the last of my four spare metric clevises from Agri Supply, I'll give it a try and report back if nobody else has given it a whirl.
I got the idea from Island Tractor's post, wherein he gave the info on cheaper blades from Flailmaster.com. I picked up a bunch of those, and they do indeed work fine. However, he also mentioned an SAE clevis - Flailmaster part #M-100761. This clevis is too wide to fit between the ears of the Caroni drum. However...I was able to easily tweak it to fit. Pic:
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I simply took one of the M10x80mm bolts and a nut, and pressed the SAE clevis together. It deformed as I expected, such that the ears are no longer perfectly parallel - but that doesn't seem to matter. The assembly shown above still moves easily on the stock M10x80mm bolt, swinging back and forth with no interference. The clevis modification takes all of a minute or so.
Some caveats:
- You'll likely want to replace all of your metric clevises if you go this route - not just the broken ones. This SAE clevis is indeed beefier than the metric one, and weighs more. I'd be concerned about proper balance mixing them up.
- The entire assembly is just a tad longer than stock - perhaps 1/8".
Here's a breakdown of current pricing from Agri Supply vs. the sources I used for the entire assembly:
Agri Supply
Clevis: 6.99
2 x Blades@ 3.49: 6.98
M10x80mm Bolt: 3.49
M10 Nylock nut: 1.49
Total: $18.95
Elsewhere
Clevis M-100761: $2.80 (flailmaster.com)
2 x M-108381 blades@$1.54: 3.08 (flailmaster.com)
M10x80mm Bolt: 0.46 (nutty.com)
M10 Nylock nut: 0.13 (nutty.com)
Total: $6.47
Yup...almost 1/3 the price. And, based on the sturdier appearance of the SAE clevis - my guess is, the cheaper assembly will hold up to more abuse.
Again - untested, but looks promising.
I was looking to get an update from DaNag about his experiences over the past two seasons using the Flailmaster clevis instead of the original Caroni clevis. He doesn't seem to be very active on TBN these days so we may not hear back. I decided to go ahead and start using the Flailmaster clevises using DaNag's modification technique which is simply to squeeze the open end of the clevis in a table vise (using a pipe for leverage) and then using a grinder or flap disk to shave off a small amount extra (he did 1/6", I did probably only 1/16") so the clevis swings freely in the mount. I'm posting this to give you my experience after starting to switch over.
As you Caroni owners undoubtedly know, the original Caroni supplied clevises wear out pretty quickly (a season or two) and when they break, you lose the clevis plus a couple of knives. PITA and expensive as each set (clevis, knives and bolt/nut) costs almost $20 from AgriSupply. I did some aggressive mowing this week and had to replace seven sets. Over the seven years I have had my mower, I have probably replaced about 40-50 sets. That starts to add up even if using the cheaper Flailmaster blades and purchasing the M10x80mm bolt and lock nut in bulk. Also, as the mower gets out of balance after losing a set or two, it means frequently having to stop, return to the barn and spend twenty minutes changing out the broken sets. As I stated, a PITA and a blemish on what is otherwise a very fine mower. The issue is pretty clearly that the Caroni supplied clevises simply wear down pretty quickly and once they get to about 1/4" thickness, they break when hitting something fairly solid such as a stump or rock. See photo #1 which shows that virtually every single break is at the corner of the clevis and that the clevises are worn by about half (don't have any remaining new Caroni clevises to compare in the photo but they start off about 3/8" thick). When new they don't break nearly as easily. After a season or two the clevises become fragile.
I ordered a full set of 28 Flailmaster clevises plus spares (part number M-100761 from flailmaster.com) as well as a new set of blades. I used the vice to squeeze the clevis to an OD of 1.5" and then grinder to remove maybe a 1/32 from each side. See photos 2 and 3. I started with the intention of switching over the whole set at once just as DaNag had done. However, after modifying a few of the new Flailmaster clevises and mounting them with blades, I decided to see how the mower ran. Smooth. No evidence of imbalance even though the Flailmaster clevis is about 0.8 ounces heavier than the Caroni version. After that little test I decided to do some light mowing with the mixed set. Worked fine. Then moved to heavier mowing (basically fields unmown in two years with waist high grass and brush and ???occasional rocks and unseen stumps/tree limbs etc. Mowing in this heavier duty test went fine but I noticed after a while some increased vibration so I checked the mower and sure enough I had lost another three Caroni clevis sets. Back to barn, put in three more Flailmasters and went mowing again. All well but again after a while vibration and to no surprise a few more Caroni sets were gone. At this point I just decided that I will bring sets of the modified Flailmaster parts into the field with me and change them out as needed. There does NOT seem to be any reason to bother changing out all 28 sets at once (it can be a challenge to unbolt some of the old ones as the outboard threads on the M10 bolts are pretty banged up after years of mowing).
Bottom line:
1) DaNag's modification (squeeze in vice plus grinder to the sides) works just fine.
2) The Flailmaster clevises are heavier duty
3) No need to change out all 28 at once as the rotor is still in balance if only one or two at a time are changed.
Photos 2 and 3 show modified clevis (actually I ground a bit more off after taking photo). Photo 4 shows simply the field I was mowing.