by KE4AVB » Sun Apr 06, 2014 4:14 pm
It was so simple that I should had caught as I removed the transmission the first time. Let me explain it a term the might make sense to those that have hot rods. It was a torque related problem. The transmission or in a car the rear end was twisting under acceleration. In a hot rod you add torsion bars to limit this twisting. If you don't you can go for wild ride as the drive shaft comes out and takes out rear part out the car. One time was enough for me; after that I started making driveshaft retaining cages for my cars.
Here the problem was that the two bolts that prevented torque twist had gone missing. Since I had only removed two of these transmissions in five years I miss it the first time around. As the machine was engaged in reverse the forward part of transmission would drop just enough for the drive belt to climb out of the transmission pulley. I of course had to pull the unit a second to retap those two bolt holes as they were stripped.
Now of course there other causes too such broken mounts, broken frames, and of course broken transmission housings. Just shows why some our questions about the obvious things are necessary as things can be sometimes be so easily overlooked or rule out without even checking them.
I just got in a lulu of a problem with Kawasaki FC420V that the JD dealer couldn't fix and they had it for three months. The owner wanted tell what the JD said was wrong but ask him withhold that info until I check the engine without that info. I think finally narrowed it down, now just waiting for the parts I ordered. Starts when cold and sometimes not. Runs greats when it is. Can't engage the PTO at near idle without killing the engine; at normal mowing speed the PTO engages fine. Engine then may or may start afterwards after it is killed by the PTO. I have 100 psi and the minimum required for this engine 73 psi. so that not it and it not carb related as it won't even fire on a raw fuel dump.
Last edited by
KE4AVB on Sun Apr 06, 2014 6:21 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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