daTeacha
Veteran Member
I bought a new spring for the idler pulley on my mower over the weekend. Got it all installed, remounted the deck, mowed about 15 minutes, and the spring broke. I called the dealer and they gave me a new spring Monday. The spring I installed over the weekend broke in exactly the same place as the original. The dealer parts guy said he figured it was a defective spring that they gave me and so didn't charge me for the new one.
While installing the new one, I noticed a bump on the inside of one pulley that turned out to be a bit of oak twig that was jammed in the bottom of the groove. Could something like this cause the spring to break? It made the belt tighten and loosen just a bit with every revolution of the pulley stretching the spring same amount each time, so I'm thinking that repeated motion might have induced metal fatigue in the same spot on the two springs leading to the premature failure.
Alternately, I thought spring steel was pretty resistant to metal fatigue. Comments and discussion will be appreciated, but not enough to get me to come and mow your place.
While installing the new one, I noticed a bump on the inside of one pulley that turned out to be a bit of oak twig that was jammed in the bottom of the groove. Could something like this cause the spring to break? It made the belt tighten and loosen just a bit with every revolution of the pulley stretching the spring same amount each time, so I'm thinking that repeated motion might have induced metal fatigue in the same spot on the two springs leading to the premature failure.
Alternately, I thought spring steel was pretty resistant to metal fatigue. Comments and discussion will be appreciated, but not enough to get me to come and mow your place.