jinman
Rest in Peace
- Joined
- Feb 23, 2001
- Messages
- 20,387
- Location
- Texas - Wise County - Sunset
- Tractor
- NHTC45D, NH LB75B, Ford Jubilee
I bought a JD LA145 riding lawnmower about 1-1/2 years ago. I now have 56.1 hours on the clock. The mower has been very good, but it has had a howling idler pulley on the deck for probably 25 hours. The 48" deck has three pulleys and three idlers. Only one of those idlers is spring loaded. The other two are rigid mounted. The howling idler on my deck was the first one after the PTO pulley on the engine. Since the PTO is electric, that idler gets one heck of a shock when you engage the PTO. It finally failed this last week and started binding up and causing the belt to slip/slide intermittently. My nose immediately smelled the hot belt and I knew it was time for action.
I checked JD's website and found out the idler pulley was only $8.50. The mower deck is still under a 2-yr warranty, but there is no way I am going to load the deck in my pickup and haul it 35 miles to the JD dealer and leave it to be repaired. That would mean two trips (down & back) to drop off the deck and two trips to pick it up. Since I wanted to put new blades on the deck, grease the zerks on the blade pulleys, and do other general maintenance, I just called my JD dealer and asked him to hold the part for me at the parts counter so I could pick it up on the first convenient time I came by. I didn't have to fool with the warranty issue and just picked up the idler and paid for it. That was the best solution for me.
After installing the idler, the mower sounds like a new one and works very well. I do think I'll buy an extra one of these idlers so I'll have it handy. My guess is that it will probabably fail again. $8.50 for insurance is not a bad price to pay.
I also had one other issue with the mower recently. I let it run out of fuel. Actually, the tank still had 1/4" of fuel in it, but the fuel pump couldn't pump the fuel and the engine sputtered and died. I refilled the tank and blew into the filler to slightly pressurize everything, but could only get the engine to sputter. I finally had to open the fuel line and bleed off all the air to and through the fuel pump. The pump is located on the outside of the engine on the left side and very handy. It was a very easy job to do, but was very frustrating until I realized what the problem was and what needed to be done. The clue was that the fuel filter was only half full of fuel. After bleeding, it was completely full.
In the process, I noticed the hood hinge was made so the hood can be easily removed for complete access to the whole engine. You disconnect the headlight connector and the hood can be lifted and pulled forward. It has slots in the hinge point and the hood just comes off completely. It's the kind of thing I love about this JD mower. It has some very neat features. I also love the easily adjustable seat.
I checked JD's website and found out the idler pulley was only $8.50. The mower deck is still under a 2-yr warranty, but there is no way I am going to load the deck in my pickup and haul it 35 miles to the JD dealer and leave it to be repaired. That would mean two trips (down & back) to drop off the deck and two trips to pick it up. Since I wanted to put new blades on the deck, grease the zerks on the blade pulleys, and do other general maintenance, I just called my JD dealer and asked him to hold the part for me at the parts counter so I could pick it up on the first convenient time I came by. I didn't have to fool with the warranty issue and just picked up the idler and paid for it. That was the best solution for me.
After installing the idler, the mower sounds like a new one and works very well. I do think I'll buy an extra one of these idlers so I'll have it handy. My guess is that it will probabably fail again. $8.50 for insurance is not a bad price to pay.
I also had one other issue with the mower recently. I let it run out of fuel. Actually, the tank still had 1/4" of fuel in it, but the fuel pump couldn't pump the fuel and the engine sputtered and died. I refilled the tank and blew into the filler to slightly pressurize everything, but could only get the engine to sputter. I finally had to open the fuel line and bleed off all the air to and through the fuel pump. The pump is located on the outside of the engine on the left side and very handy. It was a very easy job to do, but was very frustrating until I realized what the problem was and what needed to be done. The clue was that the fuel filter was only half full of fuel. After bleeding, it was completely full.
In the process, I noticed the hood hinge was made so the hood can be easily removed for complete access to the whole engine. You disconnect the headlight connector and the hood can be lifted and pulled forward. It has slots in the hinge point and the hood just comes off completely. It's the kind of thing I love about this JD mower. It has some very neat features. I also love the easily adjustable seat.