Bush hog gear box lubrication

   / Bush hog gear box lubrication #1  

TNhobbyfarmer

Veteran Member
Joined
Dec 23, 2004
Messages
1,185
Location
Middle Tennessee
Tractor
Kubota L3430 Polaris Ranger 500
The gear box on my bush hog was leaking last summer. I partially filled it with gear oil but ran out of the oil and finished the refill with grease as a stop gap for the last use of the season. I intend to use corn head grease this season. What is your recommendation for emptying the gear box prior to adding the new grease? Turkey baster comes to mind. Any other thoughts?
 
   / Bush hog gear box lubrication #2  
Stand the mower on end so the water at the bottom can run out the fill hole. The turkey baster will never get past the bottom bearing to get the nasty stuff at the bottom.
 
   / Bush hog gear box lubrication #3  
I ran corn head grease on my John Deere 506 for several seasons. Finally it just wouldn't stay in at all. So I took it apart and overhauled the gear box. It was a good thing i did that as the bottom bearing was very close to piling up. What happened was that the bottom bearing had rusted up because of condensation and eventually destroyed the bearing.

My experience has been that corn head oil will get you a few years but at some point in time you will need to rebuild the gear box. I had a mixture of oil and grease and I just added the corn head oil to it. If your seal is already leaking there won't be any water in the gear box. Water runs out first as the oil floats on top of the water.
 
   / Bush hog gear box lubrication #4  
The lower seals go then the bearing, rebuild before it dies
 
   / Bush hog gear box lubrication #5  
The lower seals go then the bearing, rebuild before it dies

Just curious. How difficult is it to rebuild the gearbox and any idea on the rough cost for parts. I have a bush hog 286.
Thanks
 
   / Bush hog gear box lubrication #6  
My bearings were fine and shafts were not grooved so about $40. for 3 seals, had doubles on the bottom and singles on the top.
 
   / Bush hog gear box lubrication #7  
This was a few years ago but I spent around $300. New blades and bolts were also installed.

The hardest part was getting the stump jumper off. It took serious discussion with a torch and a heavy hammer. I warmed up the splined fitting around the shaft and pounded on the stump jumper through the hole in the deck for the blade bolts. Once the stump jumper was off then it was just a simple matter of taking the gear box apart, ordering new parts and putting it all back together.

Because I had left it for so long the area for the seal was in rough shape. It was just barely able to be installed. I filled in the rough areas in the housing with JB-Weld and put a Speedy-Sleeve on the shaft. That has held the seal in place for several years now.
 
   / Bush hog gear box lubrication
  • Thread Starter
#8  
My experience has been that corn head oil will get you a few years but at some point in time you will need to rebuild the gear box.
I'm not getting any younger, so a few years may be all I need. haha
 
   / Bush hog gear box lubrication #9  
I've been running grease in one of my rotary cutters for more than 25 years...

You don't need to run any spl. grease in the gear box! NO matter what grease you put in it, it will settle down into the bearing and lube it just fine.

Buy cheap grease and put it in half tube at a time. Check it often to see that some is staying in there... I've never opened the box and found it dry, I just add a half tube before each big job.

SR
 
   / Bush hog gear box lubrication #10  
I've been running grease in one of my rotary cutters for more than 25 years...

You don't need to run any spl. grease in the gear box! NO matter what grease you put in it, it will settle down into the bearing and lube it just fine.

Buy cheap grease and put it in half tube at a time. Check it often to see that some is staying in there... I've never opened the box and found it dry, I just add a half tube before each big job.

SR
Yeah. Standard NLGI 2 is fine as long as you cut some stumps and cinder blocks every few hours. Too much "lawn" mowing will slowly let the bearings dry out because the thicker grease gets pushed out and not shaken back in. Cornhead grease will slump back in on its own.
 
 

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