Another stuck clutch

   / Another stuck clutch #11  
Yeah, I'm probably full of it and obviously have NO practical experience with tractors......
 
   / Another stuck clutch
  • Thread Starter
#12  
Billfires.. are you saying you BLOCKED the clutch, and then found it stuck?

If it was blocked, and still acts stuck, we need to go in a different direction

Yes it was blocked, as I have since the first time it happened a few years ago. Last winter it happened but with the amount of snow we had it eventually freed up. The tractor is parked outside, but is not used on a regular basis. I have used high speed maneuvers to get it unstuck in the past. Bill C
 
   / Another stuck clutch #13  
If it was blocked down, the disc should not be rusted to the flywheel.

At that point a seized pilot may be a possibility. Need to verify if the clutch actually got blocked before sticking.
 
   / Another stuck clutch #14  
I'm at 1940 on my TC24D and it had never needed adjustment either. Since it was hydrostatic and the clutch is hardly every used, I figured it was good to go for thousands of hours and it would be something I would never need to repair. Well, like I said, mine went out in a period of an afternoon.

Now that I'm thinking back a bit, I remember when I talked to the dealership about the hydrostat pump, they told me then at 1800ish hours, that I would be due for a clutch soon. Since I had no signs of wear or play and it meant another 4 or 5 hours plus $500+ in parts, I decided to forgo it. I should have listened to the dealership.
Sorry I still don't know what the **** your dealership is talking about.
A dry clutch on a hydrostat should never need replaced.
 
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   / Another stuck clutch #15  
jwstewar:
I bought a 1988 Ford 1920 FEL last Fall and put it away for the winter while I went to Florida.
The tractor had 1056 hours on it, and I wanted to completely strip it for repair/repaint.
This past summer, a friend and I did just that. We did not "strip" the paint, but stripped the more easily removable parts off the tractor frame.
I decided that not knowing who used it, or how it was used, a clutch might be a good idea at the same time (27 year old tractor).
We split it, and had it back together in about 5 hours. The clutch job was a good bit easier that I thought it might be.
I figured that clutch was likely more than 1/2 used up, and with me at 75 years old now, I would likely not be able to do a clutch swap at 85.
New A&I aftermarket clutch, clutch release bearing, pilot bearing, rear main seal was $520.
Sand blasted many parts, primed, and painted everything.
New wheels & tires, loader bucket rebuilt, 3pt hitch rebuilt, new water hoses, some new small parts, filters, and fluids, all new Ford blue (new decals), with Ford gray fenders & wheels.
**** thing looks like new. Now I am afraid to get it dirty.
Back in the barn again. I am in Florida for the winter!
Have a new 60" TSC brush mower, and a new King Kutter 60" tiller to try out in the Spring.
 
   / Another stuck clutch #16  
Sorry I still don't know what the **** your dealership is talking about.
A dry clutch on a hydrostat should never need replaced.

likely trained by the same people ( reps? hmm... ) that put arbitray hour #'s on other parts. Yup. it's been 2000 hours, I can guarantee you that part is bad and you need to $$$$PAY$$$ us to change it. Yes.. that's right.. they all go bad at those hours no matter what use it has seen.. no no.. don't pay attention to any facts or reality.. just watch my hands...


;)
 
   / Another stuck clutch #17  
Yeah, I'm probably full of it and obviously have NO practical experience with tractors......

I didn't say that, I'm just saying, I think he knows what he is talking about. Between that and the fact he farms about 1500 acres plus cows, I think he has a little practical experience too. And as to your comment about someone burning a clutch up in a day, doesn't pertain to this. Don's comment that 2000 hours is about the life is relevant due to heat cycles and such that is when he typically sees them go out. Also confirmed by my other comment from the New Holland dealership that they made.
 
   / Another stuck clutch #18  
Sorry I still don't know what the **** your dealership is talking about.
A dry clutch on a hydrostat should never need replaced.

That is what I thought too. But Don, the friend of mine who works for John Deere (not a dealership) said that is about the max life they see out of a dry clutch. I don't know why, he said sometimes the clutch disc will start breaking apart, sometimes the little fingers (my term, not his) will get weak and not release the clutch, sometimes the throwout bearing goes out, whatever, but that is when they have to be replaced at that time frame.

Now, I remember why I quit post here very much. Everyone wants to think they are the expert and criticize everything because they think they know better because on their one or 2 (or a few) tractors something did or didn't happen so that makes it the rule. So I guess I should also mention my wife's uncle who works also at a different New Holland dealership said the same thing. None of these folks are trying to sale me anything, they are telling me these as a friend, so I guess yeah, they are all trying to make something off of me. Not.
 
   / Another stuck clutch #19  
Sorry Chris, I think I'm going to believe him. Like I said, he is a John Deere Manufacturer's rep. He is the one called in when the dealers can't figure something out, so I have to think Don knows what he is talking about - and I'm not saying you don't. And we are not talking wearing a clutch out - because I know, if you don't know what you are doing you can burn a clutch up pretty fast. We are talking other things happening to it. I won't go into the details of how he described what happens and I would quote it wrong and then everyone would jump down my throat.
Well, I wouldnt unless he could support it in some reasonably intelligent way for your specific tractor. It sounds more like an average based on observance of tractors used by boobs. ... Also a good way to sell parts and labor.
larry
 
   / Another stuck clutch #20  
Bunk...

No way to stick an arbitrary hour # on a clutch.. I've seen a rental worker ruin a clutch in 2 hours, and bought antiques with original clutches.

All depends on use.

Some tasks are more clutch intensive than others.


As Chris says clutch life depends on use. Loader work usually means more clutching that mowing or harrowing, etc. It also depends on the experience of the user. To put a hard number on clutch life without qualifying these things is meaningless. If you want to qualify all uses one should give a range of numbers 10 hrs to 6000 hrs for example. But to say the average dry clutch lasts 2000 hrs does not provide much useful info, in my opinion.
Opinions are like belly buttons-everybody has one.
 

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