A Bad Day

   / A Bad Day #1  

VernLPoole

New member
Joined
Jul 20, 2020
Messages
12
Tractor
Ford 1710, Bobcat 337
I was using a 3-point hitch mounted chipper on my Ford 1710 yesterday, and when I got back on the tractor to move to the next pile, I saw that the oil pressure warning light was on. I shut it off and checked the oil: plenty on the dipstick. Hoping it was just a bad sending unit, I removed it and cobbled a way to measure the oil pressure... Nothing, zero, zilch. Any thoughts as to likely failure mode? I believe the oil pump is on the front of the block, driven by camshaft gear? Anyone have experience with how big a job it is to get at it, or any thoughts about things to try/check before going down that dark road?
 
   / A Bad Day #2  
If there is oil on the dipstick but no oil pressure, my uneducated guess is the oil pump failed. I don't know enough to offer valuable mechanical advice but check the oil filter in hopes it has failed or the intake or supply side plumbing is somehow clogged.

Good luck, I wish I could help.
 
   / A Bad Day #3  
A quick look at a manual indicates that it is indeed driven off the cam, possibly the connection holding the driven gear to the pump shaft has loosened,where the cam spins the gear but not the pump. Another option could be that the pickup tube from the sump came loose, I'd not suspect the bypass valve as that should show at least some pressure on a gauge.
Above is based on the premise that it wasn't making any horrible, self-destructing noise, which would indicate catastrophic failure. Where to start is a toss-up, the pickup tube in the sump would probably be easiest to check, but least likely to be the cause.
 
   / A Bad Day
  • Thread Starter
#4  
I'm considering removing the oil pan first, to see if the intake tube fell off, or as you suggest, got plugged somehow... Can't think of anything else to try.
A quick look at a manual indicates that it is indeed driven off the cam, possibly the connection holding the driven gear to the pump shaft has loosened,where the cam spins the gear but not the pump. Another option could be that the pickup tube from the sump came loose, I'd not suspect the bypass valve as that should show at least some pressure on a gauge.
Above is based on the premise that it wasn't making any horrible, self-destructing noise, which would indicate catastrophic failure. Where to start is a toss-up, the pickup tube in the sump would probably be easiest to check, but least likely to be the cause.
No horrible noise, so that's good. I guess I'll start by removing the front drive shaft and the oil pan to check the pickup tube, but I'm not terribly optimistic. Seems like the next steps will involve removing the whole front end of the tractor, so the drive shaft would be the least of my worries.
 
   / A Bad Day #5  
the good news is that it seems you caught it in time w/o damaging the engine. keep the forum informed as you proceed. is removing the ft end required to look at the oil pump drive gears, etc? best on that
 
   / A Bad Day #6  
The cam drive I know can wear out/break. The pickup tube could be plugged. I’d say pulling the pan is a good start.
 
   / A Bad Day #7  
Many many years ago my grandfather wasn't getting any oil
pressure on his engine and my dad being a mech they pulled
the pump off the cam and found that the arm had worn down
so no pumping action grandfather took it apart and heated the
arm up in the forge and aflated it and expanded the metal to
make contact with the cam and it worked.

willy
 
   / A Bad Day #8  
while you got the oil pan off check the rod and main bearings.
 
   / A Bad Day
  • Thread Starter
#9  
the good news is that it seems you caught it in time w/o damaging the engine. keep the forum informed as you proceed. is removing the ft end required to look at the oil pump drive gears, etc? best on that
I'll start by taking the loader frame and the "hood" off, and keep going till I feel like I have enough room to work. I'm guessing it will end up being easier to just pull the radiator too, at that point.
 
   / A Bad Day
  • Thread Starter
#10  
Many many years ago my grandfather wasn't getting any oil
pressure on his engine and my dad being a mech they pulled
the pump off the cam and found that the arm had worn down
so no pumping action grandfather took it apart and heated the
arm up in the forge and aflated it and expanded the metal to
make contact with the cam and it worked.

willy
Your grandfather sounds like the Real Deal!
 

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