crazyal
Super Member
You said in your first post that the center hole in the dish was too large for the axle hub. Is this true or not?
Not the center hole, the holes for the mounting bolts/ studs.
You said in your first post that the center hole in the dish was too large for the axle hub. Is this true or not?
No. I didnt miss it. I addressed it earlier. The fasteners were likely damaged by the wheel movement. Check recommended torque on Class 10.9 M16 fine thread. I find figures for coarse thread cluster around 250/260. Fine thread will typically accommodate about 10% more. So ~275/285
Torque to yield figures are up to 40% higher - - - ~ 380.
as has been stated a couple of times, the lug nuts are supposed to be conical, like car and truck nuts, somebody rigged this for failure, maybe they were just too lazy to get the proper nuts, and used flat nuts, thinking it'll work.. who knows what the original owner was thinking before the OP bought this..
All one has to do is look at Kubota's Illustrated parts to see the proper fasteners consist of lock washer and conventional nut for the studs and bolt with lock washer for either R4 or R1 rear wheels.
It would be really nice if people would verify info before they post information and state it as fact.
Good luck to the OP in resolving the issue.
I think it is too late to fix this without replacement. - - Arent those cracks around the bolt hole?I have 4 Kubotas long term with that type of mounting and have no indication of any motion much less failure. Those are 16mm Class10.9 fine threads capable of sustaining well over 250ft-lb. - Your bolts/studs may have experienced additional stress due to the cracking. - The lock washers are not a plus although I have not experienced trouble. They present two problems; 1) scarring the disk, and 2) applying the clamp force on too small a footprint, thereby adding stress to the scarred hole periphery. It would be better to have a larger OD high strength flat washer against the disk - with or without the lockwasher.
Im not sure where your trouble originated, but when you renew the setup you will start with a built in advantage if you get some 5/8" Grade 8 flatwashers from TSC and incorporate them as mentioned.
Any time I have ever seen wheels that looked like that they had been run loose. I do not expect this to be different, although it is possible the wheel or hardware are incorrect for the application. If it were not any of the aforementioned scenarios, this forum would be flooded with similar text and photos from other Kubota owners, as well as the dealership shop I run. BTW both that wheel and all the hardware is scrap metal. If the photo is of the better of the two, the other set is junk as well.
No. I didnt miss it. I addressed it earlier. The fasteners were likely damaged by the wheel movement. Check recommended torque on Class 10.9 M16 fine thread. I find figures for coarse thread cluster around 250/260. Fine thread will typically accommodate about 10% more. So ~275/285
Torque to yield figures are up to 40% higher - - - ~ 380.
= = Fastener fatigue/damage due to whatever it was that damaged the dish mounting surfaces. = = We dont know the tractors history.Well if you didn't miss it, you certainly don't understand it. Quote from crazyal:
No matter what torque figures YOU came up with, crazyal said he broke one of the studs just by going a little past the torque for the bolts. And the original torque value stated was only 160 ft-lbs.
Even Class 8.8 fine thread is rated to above 200 ftlb.Actually I was wrong and edited. the 40% higher yield figure would be closer to 380 ft-lb. ... However bolts torqued to yield should not be reused in critical service - and these bolts/studs are meant for reuse. 300ftlb max use should allow enough safety margin since it is well below yield.:confused2: I cant see any reason for the 160 figure in that application since the bolts are much stronger and there are no affected components that would be sensitive to distortion, like is sometimes the case on automotive disk brakes.
To reaffirm, the wheels are hub centric. The bolt holes are not tapered. The nuts are not tapered.
With that said an agreed with, your wheels were loose. It wasn't vertical load that caused the holes to become elongated. This was caused by rotational forces, allowed because they were loose.