Anybody have an "older" 4200/4300 etc? Reason I ask is for grins I went to JD's site to read the manuals...
Noticed a SN Break...only the "newer" one had its Manual online for viewing...So I went to JDParts.com and also see 4 different front axles for the 4300...All sub over to 2 PN's....Makes me scratch my head...I really do trust my dealer, they havent wronged me yet...very knowledgable people....so the more I look at it, the more I'm thinking they were right when they were telling me some machines took 80w90 and some take HyGard...seeing all the breaks & various housings on the 4300 makes me think JD Engineering did more then just specify a shorter dipstick...
It's an interesting theory, but the service manual should deal with those
differences in lubricants, and it does not. Of course, there could have
been a secret "technical service bulletin" to dealers.....
I own the giant paper TM1677 service manual, as well as the PDF that I
bought from JD last year. Both show dates of 06APR01 and a note that
they supercede the one that came out in JUL99. I believe JUL99 was
the intro of the all-new 4x00s. (I drooled over them back then, too.)
By that early date of APR01, there were 4 different axles as you say, and
that was less than 2 years after the 4x00s came out. The differences are
noted in the tech manual and parts book. It seems the 107 axle was
oldest, followed by the 109 (my 2000 4300 has this one), then the 103/
105. Most notably, the earliest axle had only a 10-bolt pumpkin (vs. 12)
and only it specced no O-ring on the dipstick. The O-ring was only
for the later axles.
You must know your axle # if you ever buy seals. My axle prod date
was 12-22-99, so it would seem the 107 axles were dumped quickly.