Richard
Super Member
- Joined
- Apr 6, 2000
- Messages
- 5,001
- Location
- Knoxville, TN
- Tractor
- International 1066 Full sized JCB Loader/Backhoe and a John Deere 430 to mow with
I've got a 1550-B, built sometime around 1987.
couple years ago the radiator was leaking so I took it out to be fixed. I debated on replacing it but at $700 or so... I hesitated. (might be worth knowing I use this as a home owner, it doesn't earn anything for me)
They fixed it... and now the radiator is leaking again. Called for price and NOW, with the dollar falling, it's $1,700 or so for a new radiator
I am wondering.... when I took it to the radiator shop, several years ago, they told me they could order a new core for it and just replace the guts (not from JCB).
I'm wondering if I did that... if I might reasonably expect the part they put in to last?
Reason I'm concerned... I bought this used and as it turned out... someone prior to me had cobbed together a radiator for the oil. They stuck some kind of water/automotove radiator in there. I put a new (proper) hydralic radiator in there and when I pulled it out of the box I was amazed... darn thing has tubes something like one inch in diamater with fins on it... CLEARLY 'industrial' version compared to the wimpy radiator that was in there.
Now that I need water, I'm wondering if I can fix this "properly" without spending $1,700.
If spending that amount is the BEST way to fix it and fix it right then I'll do it that way... I just don't want to
couple years ago the radiator was leaking so I took it out to be fixed. I debated on replacing it but at $700 or so... I hesitated. (might be worth knowing I use this as a home owner, it doesn't earn anything for me)
They fixed it... and now the radiator is leaking again. Called for price and NOW, with the dollar falling, it's $1,700 or so for a new radiator
I am wondering.... when I took it to the radiator shop, several years ago, they told me they could order a new core for it and just replace the guts (not from JCB).
I'm wondering if I did that... if I might reasonably expect the part they put in to last?
Reason I'm concerned... I bought this used and as it turned out... someone prior to me had cobbed together a radiator for the oil. They stuck some kind of water/automotove radiator in there. I put a new (proper) hydralic radiator in there and when I pulled it out of the box I was amazed... darn thing has tubes something like one inch in diamater with fins on it... CLEARLY 'industrial' version compared to the wimpy radiator that was in there.
Now that I need water, I'm wondering if I can fix this "properly" without spending $1,700.
If spending that amount is the BEST way to fix it and fix it right then I'll do it that way... I just don't want to