Slip clutch question

   / Slip clutch question #1  

EdDekker

Silver Member
Joined
Apr 11, 2000
Messages
191
Location
New Ipswich, New Hampshire
Tractor
Kubota B2400, Bobcat 331 Mini-Excavator
My Land Pride 1542 rotary tiller came with a slip clutch (I live in New Hampshire - there is a reason we are called the Granite state). In three years it has never slipped even when I hit a rock big enough to stall the tractor. I found the instructions here to free a slip clutch. I was going to loosen the nuts around the edges and noticed that the number W2300 is on the plastic shield. I can't find a number on the clutch itself. The Walterscheid booklet identifies the 2300 as a 46 HP unit.

I have a Kubota B2400.

Where can I find a number of the clutch on the clutch itself? (The W2300 on the shield may apply to the shield or the wrong shield may have been installed or …)

Will a 46 HP slip clutch ever slip when installed on an 18 HP PTO?

Should the dealer have supplied a different slip clutch?



Ed
 
   / Slip clutch question #2  
<font color=blue>Will a 46 HP slip clutch ever slip when installed on an 18 HP PTO?</font color=blue>

I have shear pins instead of slip clutches on all my implements, but as far as I know, all slip clutches are adjustable (and need re-adjusting periodically or they'll get seized up and won't work). So I think all you need to do is get it freed up, and when you re-adjust it, set it so that it slips a little easier; don't think the dealer would (or should) supply a "different" slip clutch.

Bird
 
   / Slip clutch question #3  
Here is a link to the landpride site. You can down load the owners manual as well as the parts manual for your tiller at no charge.
http://www.landpride.com/lp/manuals/rt_manuals.html

I've got a RTA-2570 tiller last fall and the clutch has only slipped one time in roughly 40-50 hrs of use. It was a piece of railroad tie that did it. But it does till real nice.

Did my biggest field yesterday with it about five acres. Single pass I can do an acre and one half an hour with no problem. Shame is I make more money on the small gardens than the larger ones seems like. Oh well, the tiller is now payed for after the field yesterday.

Gordon

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