**** Branch

   / **** Branch #1  

Kyle241

Platinum Member
Joined
Sep 12, 2010
Messages
701
Location
Eastern Ontario
Tractor
Kubota MX5100
Here are some pics of the damage a branch did when it slid up under my tractor and into my radiator fan.

DSC_0331.jpg


DSC_0330.jpg


New fan installed.
DSC_0332-1.jpg


Now I need to get a price on a radiator as I'm not so sure this one can be fixed. I'll still take it to the local radiator shop but I'm not holding out hope. This time round the, I believe the branch pushed the fan blades into the rad and it was subsequently crushed pretty good.
 
   / **** Branch #2  
This time ...

So there was/were other times? If that's the case, you have some might bad luck there. :laughing: (sorry, couldn't resist). Good luck with salvaging the rad.
 
   / **** Branch
  • Thread Starter
#3  
So there was/were other times? If that's the case, you have some might bad luck there. :laughing: (sorry, couldn't resist). Good luck with salvaging the rad.

Yup, twice!!! The first one was about 10 yrs ago though and on my previous property.
 
   / **** Branch #4  
The Radiator shop shouild be able to recore it for ya.
 
   / **** Branch #5  
Yup, twice!!! The first one was about 10 yrs ago though and on my previous property.

maybe its time to put a nice expanded metal steel screen over the spot these branches are getting in? Sorry to hear tho always sucks when the tractor is not in working mode that seems to be the time you need it most.
 
   / **** Branch #6  
The places branches can get into is amazing, and the damage they can cause with hoses, wires and other things is hard to believe. I feel like I should put armor on the tractor.
 
   / **** Branch #7  
A friend from work had the same problem with his B, immediately upon getting it. It didn't have 5 hrs on the clock and needed a new rad & fan. Then he put plywood in the opening in front of the rad where the stick got in from below. Poor design as that should be guarded, IMHO. I checked this on my L when I got it, and there is no openings a stick can get into, unless it punches through the grill completely.
 
   / **** Branch #8  
Those old bumpers seem to be a great way to slow this problem down. Just wondering, why so much damage? Seems when the stick encountered the fan, you should have heard the tick tick tick like a playing card on a bicycle spoke, long before the fan was shredded into the radiator.
David from jax
 
   / **** Branch
  • Thread Starter
#9  
Those old bumpers seem to be a great way to slow this problem down. Just wondering, why so much damage? Seems when the stick encountered the fan, you should have heard the tick tick tick like a playing card on a bicycle spoke, long before the fan was shredded into the radiator.
David from jax


Don't know why the radiator took such a hit. As soon as it happened, I shut the engine off perhaps a few seconds after but that blade is spinning fast so I am assuming the branch pushed a small piece of metal that acts as a guard between the fan and the fan belts. This subsequently caused the blades to bend in towards the radiator so I'm guessing the blades spun around a few times before they stopped.
 
   / **** Branch #10  
you should have heard the tick tick tick like a playing card on a bicycle spoke, long before the fan was shredded into the radiator.
David from jax

How do you figure that??
Seem like a couple inches of forward travel is the difference between encountering the fan, & it being pushed into the radiator. Don't know anyone that has that kind of reaction time... :confused2:
 
   / **** Branch #11  
To the OP: sorry to hear about your bit of bad luck on the B.

A friend from work had the same problem with his B, immediately upon getting it. It didn't have 5 hrs on the clock and needed a new rad & fan. Then he put plywood in the opening in front of the rad where the stick got in from below. Poor design as that should be guarded, IMHO. I checked this on my L when I got it, and there is no openings a stick can get into, unless it punches through the grill completely.

On my 3rd or 4th day out with my L, I punched a branch through the grill while moving some brush. Never knew it happened until I shut her down for the day and saw a silver dollar sized hole and the surrounding grill bady deformed. Turns out the grill is a very soft and thin bit of plastic. I got lucky - it only pushed the battery around a little - no damage to the radiator. Made me realize that the grill is not protection for anything heavier than tall grass or twigs.

A metal grill fabrication job is on my to-do list as well as some protection for the undersides. I'd like to make up some sort of skid plate/guard to prevent sticks getting in from underneath when I'm moving brush piles or working in the woods.
 
   / **** Branch #12  
How do you figure that??
Seem like a couple inches of forward travel is the difference between encountering the fan, & it being pushed into the radiator. Don't know anyone that has that kind of reaction time... :confused2:

Ok, maybe, depending on what he was doing at the time. I was just thinking that maybe he was listening to the radio while bushhoging and the radio covered up the initial scrapping noise as the stick slid up under the tractor, before it ever got to the fan. Typically a stick will make wop sound when it encounters a tractor, or a scrapping noise as it approaches the radiator (sliding on the undercarriage), but granted, it is usually hard to hear.
I guess I was just trying to make a point that IF the Kyle was listening to a radio, then it may have been a expensive tune to hear.
Typical tractor operations should be made at a speed that will allow you to react to objects. However this doesn't do much for "getting the job done", so most people tend to put that one aside for the better accepted one which is "got it done this fast ___________"
Everything is a trade off, and Kyle got the worse end of that trade this time.
David from jax
 

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