My Stupidity kicked in at full throttle.

   / My Stupidity kicked in at full throttle. #1  

confederatemule

Silver Member
Joined
Mar 30, 2009
Messages
127
I bought a new 2024 Mahindra 1126 tractor. I have put around 70 hours on it. Until this past Saturday it had never had it's PTO stub uncovered. When I took the cover off the stub looked very smooth and black. I intended to connect a new 48" rotary cutter to the tractor. Every thing looked good and clean in the PTO shaft yoke.

Well the shaft went on to the stub about 1/2". From there I used a block of wood and drove it on, as far as it would go. About 1/4" from the lock pin groove.

My thought when driving it on was that it would free up while I was using it. But I ain't gonna use it for fear that the shaft will free up and sling off.

Now to my question. Does anyone have any suggestions as to how I am gonna git the shaft off. I am disconnected from the rotary cutter with the cutter end of the drive line separated from the tractor end of the drive line.

My thought is to tie the shaft to a tree and drive off with the tractor.

I am open to any other ideas.

When I git this apart I will be cleaning the powder coat paint off of the stub.

Mule
 
   / My Stupidity kicked in at full throttle. #2  
There are a lot of smart people on here so you will get some good advice.

My thoughts are heat and some way to impact hit it like you drove it on, only to drive it off.
A steady pull like tying to a tree may cause more damage.
 
   / My Stupidity kicked in at full throttle. #4  
I wouldn't try brute force. I had a PTO shaft on a tiller that was locked up. I tried pulling on it with the loader (brute force). Didn't work. I sprayed the heck out of it with PB Blaster, put strap through the PTO yoke, and hooked it to a come a long on a tree and applied tension. I let it sit overnight and kept spraying it with PB Blaster. Then, I took a hammer and did a tap, tap, tap. It came right apart.

If spraying oil on it doesn't work, try brake cleaner, carb cleaner or solvent. A soft touch is better than brute force.
 
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   / My Stupidity kicked in at full throttle. #5  
Hitch a ratchet strap to the shaft and to a solid object. Tighten it enough to stretch the strap a couple of inches, then tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap.

Bruce
 
   / My Stupidity kicked in at full throttle. #6  
You got it separated just keep steady pilling pressure on it and tap on it at the same time. You may nvilve someone else to help. Slow and easy and you won’t tear up anything. You will get it
 
   / My Stupidity kicked in at full throttle. #7  
I bought a new 2024 Mahindra 1126 tractor. I have put around 70 hours on it. Until this past Saturday it had never had it's PTO stub uncovered. When I took the cover off the stub looked very smooth and black. I intended to connect a new 48" rotary cutter to the tractor. Every thing looked good and clean in the PTO shaft yoke.

Well the shaft went on to the stub about 1/2". From there I used a block of wood and drove it on, as far as it would go. About 1/4" from the lock pin groove.

My thought when driving it on was that it would free up while I was using it. But I ain't gonna use it for fear that the shaft will free up and sling off.

Now to my question. Does anyone have any suggestions as to how I am gonna git the shaft off. I am disconnected from the rotary cutter with the cutter end of the drive line separated from the tractor end of the drive line.

My thought is to tie the shaft to a tree and drive off with the tractor.

I am open to any other ideas.

When I git this apart I will be cleaning the powder coat paint off of the stub.

Mule
Leash a chain around what should be the detent of the diveshare where it meets your tractor's PTO. The chain may not be able to collapse the spring-loaded driveshaft detent to release the driveshaft from your PTO, so pay attention. Attention is named "the hammer of your choice," should the chain not be able to compress the detent enough to release the driveshaft on its own.

Then take the other end of the chain and leach it around a tree.

Confirm everything looks right.

Then drive the tractor forward in the hope that the drive shaft pops off of the tractor's PTO.


Things to note:

Make certain everything looks right. For example, the chain should be on the PTO trying to collapse the spring-loaded thingy on the driveshaft so the driveshaft CAN disconnect. Have a friend or family member help but explain what is supposed to happen so they own the task for themselves and can callout problems.
 
   / My Stupidity kicked in at full throttle. #8  
Hitch a ratchet strap to the shaft and to a solid object. Tighten it enough to stretch the strap a couple of inches, then tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap.

Bruce
It's fascinating how many ways there are to do something.... just how much work people will gamble against how much risk they are willing to take.

Chaining it to a tree and driving forward will probably accomplish something, but you don't have any control over what that might be. It might even be the PTO Housing or even the rear end casting that comes loose..

I would try that idea with the ratchet strap first. It's pretty safe. It appeals to my own bias towards solving problems with more work and less risk to expensive parts.

If that didn't work, my next move would be even more conservative. I'd take the PTO shaft apart until it was possible to put a standard gear puller onto the coupllng. That might involve some hacksawing and a new PTO shaft, but it insures that pulling the coupling off won't do any farther damage to the PTO. And there is zero chance of damaging the PTO housing

rScotty
 
   / My Stupidity kicked in at full throttle. #9  
I would suggest using 2 pry bars(90 degree head) to work the pto shaft off. This has worked for me.

Querry: where is the zerk? Is it in the side of the yoke, or is it in the cross? If it is in the cross you may damage the load strap.
I would not tie the shaft to a tree and drive either.
 

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