Saving A Ford 3910

   / Saving A Ford 3910 #122  
   / Saving A Ford 3910 #123  
Daxx......I was hoping for a "pallets in field" equivalent thread.
Maybe that is not gonna happen now.
Such a shame!
 
   / Saving A Ford 3910
  • Thread Starter
#124  
Yea, it went off track when the hillbillies sitting around the country store tried to get it over on what they thought was a city slicker that didn't know what he was doing.
 
   / Saving A Ford 3910 #125  
Sir, I believe the thread has drifted by your hand.

I will continue to follow to see your solution to the problem.
 
   / Saving A Ford 3910
  • Thread Starter
#126  
You have seen the solution to this problem, and it will not be asking advice from any of you.
 
   / Saving A Ford 3910 #127  
Yea, it went off track when the hillbillies sitting around the country store tried to get it over on what they thought was a city slicker that didn't know what he was doing.

Huh? A bunch of people with many combined years of working on tractors (for example, RickB has at least 20 years working in and running shops at tractor dealerships, including running the shop for a good sized New Holland dealer for quite a few years. ovrszd has a bunch of experience working on tractors (especially older machines), thepumpguysc has seen a lot of injection pumps and diesel tractors, etc).
All have helped a lot of people on here over the years and have steered them to the best repair for their situation.
All are saying work it hard and get the crud cleaned out of it before you commit to spend time and money tearing it apart and some smoke on startup is to be expected, none of them stand to gain or lose a penny one way or the other no matter what you choose to do.

I would follow their advise and not spend time and money on a rebuild until you work it hard.

Aaron Z
 
   / Saving A Ford 3910 #128  
Yea, it went off track when the hillbillies sitting around the country store tried to get it over on what they thought was a city slicker that didn't know what he was doing.

You have seen the solution to this problem, and it will not be asking advice from any of you.

A seldom used but useful tool here is the ignore list. Handy for ridding oneself of chronic annoyances.

Btw, I have little doubt whether you know what you are doing.
 
   / Saving A Ford 3910 #129  
If you don't have work for you tractor at the moment, just find a road with decent hill and send it. Make it work hard, really hard.

Let the engine build some proper heat to clean all the carbon.
 
   / Saving A Ford 3910 #130  
Since the OP won’t listen to people with plenty of experience under their belt, I guess that I can sit in my armchair and give advice.
Every time that I’ve had part of an engine fixed- especially repairing the top end- all that you do is find the next weakest point. If you choose to redo the heads, you may as well do the entire engine at the same time. Otherwise you are just doing a half a** job and it will never be right until you finish the job.
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

2016 JOHN DEERE 3032E LOT NUMBER 94 (A53084)
2016 JOHN DEERE...
2010 Ford Edge SE SUV (A51694)
2010 Ford Edge SE...
2010 Cadillac CTS Sedan (A51694)
2010 Cadillac CTS...
2011 IC Corporation PB105 School Bus (A52377)
2011 IC...
2020 Polaris Ranger 1000 4x4 Utility Cart (A51691)
2020 Polaris...
2017 Ford F-150 4x4 Ext. Cab Pickup Truck (A51692)
2017 Ford F-150...
 
Top