OP
Seasoned Carpentry
New member
Yes, I'll clean it up and dry lube it, but I don't hold one whit of hope that it will amount to any change. There's no hesitation on the bench, there's no binding on the bench, there's no hanging up on 50 degree grease. It slaps right out with a wack, spinning like a champ. And it sounds no different on the tractor, no hesitation, a nice high pitched spin. But it doesn't engage most of the time. When it does engage it starts right up.
I'm smiling thinking of the power of relativity. In Florida 50 degrees sounds cold. In this area cold begins at 0 degrees F and real cold begins at 20 below. I plowed with this tractor at 20 below this winter and know how cold slows down the hydraulics, and thickens grease in every fitting. I know how it numbs fingers, toes, and noses, reaching through layers of insulated clothes; I know well the effect of cold on my tractor. 50 degrees is balmy compared to what it was working in only a short time ago. These starting problems have been an issue only for a month and always in the constant temperature of my garage.
Yes I'm hoping against hope that a simple cleaning will be the answer. But nothing in what I have observed points to it. Tomorrow I'll find out.
I'm smiling thinking of the power of relativity. In Florida 50 degrees sounds cold. In this area cold begins at 0 degrees F and real cold begins at 20 below. I plowed with this tractor at 20 below this winter and know how cold slows down the hydraulics, and thickens grease in every fitting. I know how it numbs fingers, toes, and noses, reaching through layers of insulated clothes; I know well the effect of cold on my tractor. 50 degrees is balmy compared to what it was working in only a short time ago. These starting problems have been an issue only for a month and always in the constant temperature of my garage.
Yes I'm hoping against hope that a simple cleaning will be the answer. But nothing in what I have observed points to it. Tomorrow I'll find out.