Dozernut
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Apr 6, 2002
- Messages
- 1,587
- Location
- South Eastern Illinois
- Tractor
- ZD1211, RTV900, LX2610SU and a SVL65 CTL
Thanks!
As Chim said, turn the tractors PTO stub shaft, not the implement shaft. The PTO stub will easily spin in it's normal direction of rotation. If you have a mid mount PTO as well, select it and the rear PTO stub will spin either way. At least it does on my JD. And shut the tractor off first!
Just found this and considering buying one
$19.99 plus shipping. Anybody have one?
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PTO Speed Wrench
PTO Speed Wrench Makes for easier alignment of the tractor and implement's PTO shafts. Flip wrench between 540 and 1000 RPM shafts.www.sloanex.com
If you can 'spin' the stub more than 1/4 turn with the PTO lever not engaged, your PTO brake is shot. Kubota's have notoriously weak PTO brakes, why I ALWAYS run an over running coupler when I'm using my shredder or any implement that can inertia freewheel when the PTO is disengaged. Once the PTO brake is shot, the stub will rotate all the time the tractor is running, PTO engaged or not.Just curious, my big tractor, Kubota L4610, I can spin the pto stub to line up the splines. On my little tractor, Kubota B2630, you cannot spin the pto stub by hand to align the splines.
The B2630 is an all hydraulic tractor and whatever I do, putting everything in neutral, the shaft will not spin by hand. I have to use the big screwdriver method or spin a blade on the implement. This makes it harder to hook up a pto implement.
I have owned several tractors but this is the only tractor I have owned that I cannot spin the pto stub. Is this the nature of the beast on these all hydraulic models or am I overlooking something?
On my old Massey I could simply spin the stub shaft to line it up. My Kioti is one that locks the shaft as others have mentioned. An additional challenge is my new RCD1884 dual spindle rotary cutter has an offset gearbox so I have to apply force at 2 different angles to both extend the tube and push the collar straight onto the shaft at the same time. Getting better with practice but certainly not as easy as a simple straight push like my old SQ60.Looks like that would be only work if your PTO doesn't have a shield around it. Would be pretty awkward on my tractors.
I second the pry-bar / large screwdriver through the implement universal joint on the end of the PTO shaft. Makes it very easy to tweak the alignment from the accessible end of the business.