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3WHDave

Chipped gear tooth

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3WHDave

Option wanted: during inspection of the transmission, I noticed a chipped gear tooth.  I did not see (after flushing) any pieces, so I’m betting it came out during disassembly.  There is plenty of tooth left, but, should I reassemble it with this gear?

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oliver2-44

What tractor is this one. Are you planning to use it as a worker or show tractor.

If it;s just for rifdng aroun shows and the neighborhood I think it would be fine.  I;ll let others chime in if its to be a worker.  

With that said, contact A-Z Tractor in out Vendor Section, a good one might cost less than you think.   

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3WHDave

Thanks Oliver2-44.  Its a low-duty tractor, to be used around the yard, pulling light wagon with lawn clippings.  It’s a D-180, overkill for the job. I will polish the chipped area to reduce any potential stress-risers.  

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ebinmaine

I'll second that.

If it's not going to move any weight or implements.

 

I'd also say give Lincoln at A to Z Tractor a call.

While it's apart.

 

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Tractorhead

Looks to me anybody shifted while in move or with not completely released clutch.

 

My thinking is, i don‘t know before, what i will do later on work with my machines, so i would exchange if possible.

Just as a Show Tractor to drive arround, i think it‘s good enough to let.

 

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pacer

I'd bet that happened when the ....incident? happened that broke those woodruf keys. That one has me sorta stumped, HYD drives just dont often do that. Not like a shifter where you can grind gears and dump the clutch, etc.

 

Anyway, not being able to get a close look I would use that gear and it will probably go right on and not be a problem. If you can Braze, build up the broken area and file/grind it back to match the rest of that tooth. For awhile years back I got into rebuilding milling machines and lathes, etc and broken teeth were pretty common. I used the brazing method several times to get the machine back to a worker. Then, of course, today a guy with a tig welder could probably do it too.

 

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stevasaurus

I'm with Pacer on fixing the tooth or replacing the gear.  That is the bottom of the 11/44 tooth gear...the part of that gear that is chipped meshes with a small pinion gear on the bottom of the cluster gear shaft.  If it meshed with a larger gear, I would probably not change it out.  :occasion-xmas:

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3WHDave

Thanks all, I am going to repair and reinstall, and also contact A-Z Tractor for a replacement gear.  I have become proficient at pulling the pumpkin and changing-out (not by design).  As for the damage, I recall clearly the time when it was being loaded and the skid-loader pushed the tractor from a wet grass surface to a dry-hard trailer, at which point it broke-loose.  I really regret not having educated myself on the existence of a "PUSH-VALVE", however, ignorance is not an excuse!

 

Dave

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stevasaurus

Knowing how it happened, is the knowledge you want when deciding on whether to fix or replace.  It makes for better choices.  :occasion-xmas: 

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3WHDave

You are so correct Stevansaurus, in my world we call that process FMEA, which is translates into “Failure Mode & Effect Analysis”, and I can only guess at what caused the failure.  Was it a hertizian stress failure or an sudden impact failure, I do not know?  But I do know that most (if not all) good designs have a safety factor of 2X.  However, I’m not willing to give-up 0.03X of that safety factor.  I will put a new gear in. Besides, at this point it will be the cheapest element of this rebuild!  Take care all,

Dave

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3WHDave

You are so correct Stevansaurus, in my world we call that process FMEA, which is translates into “Failure Mode & Effect Analysis”, and I can only guess at what caused the failure.  Was it a hertizian stress failure or an sudden impact failure, I do not know?  But I do know that most (if not all) good designs have a safety factor of 2X.  However, I’m not willing to give-up 0.25X of that safety factor (1/4 tooth).  I will put a new gear in. Besides, at this point it will be the cheapest element of this rebuild!  Take care all,

Dave

 

PS: your YouTube vids are great, thanks for sharing!

Edited by 3WHDave
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