I got some time to tear it apart today. Overall not too bad. A few bent pieces including a piece of the sector you can see in the pic below (the tab on the left is bent, compared with the one on the right and a weld is broken). A couple other small bends/dents to fix. Nothing that can't be fixed. Probably the worst finding was that the moldboard under the cutting edge was pretty rotted on one side. I may need to cut some of that out and stitch in a piece. Upper left in the photo - the black rusted areas. The pivot pins still moved, but had to be driven out of the sector. But they came out, so that's good. .
Doesnt look too terrible for the money.
I will add grease fittings there.
I did this to my truck plow as well.
Since I dont have a lathe, I didnt drill the pin. Instead, I drilled the plow itself as well as the sector. That way BOTH sides that the pin is in get greased. And mine didnt come out so easy. 10 minutes of pounding with a sledge
I Probably the worst finding was that the moldboard under the cutting edge was pretty rotted on one side. I may need to cut some of that out and stitch in a piece.
Yea, the meyers plows werent a great design for preventing rust. Another trouble area is usually quarter-sized holes that appear just above the cutting edge in 4 places......right where there is a back brace. Since it isnt welded solid...but the bottom 2 or so inches is, moisture gets in behind the angles and goes to town.
When I re-skinned mine, I welded it all solid to keep the moisture out from behind the back braces. And then a good paint before the accessories like the cutting edge and top flapper. And when I did pit them on, a little silicone to keep moisture from getting in behind.
I'm not sure if the cylinders can be re-used or not. The exposed chrome has a few pits in it, and it may tear up the seals. Dunno - that's an area I don't have much experience in. I haven't tried to move them yet. Ran out of time to mess with them.
Yea, it will wear out the seals and leak a little. If you are using your tractor hydraulics, I wouldnt worry about it. Because you could probabally run the plow for the tull 200 hrs til next service and it wouldnt leak enough to be a drop in the bucket. They arent under constant pressure.
But if it does get too bad, it is a PITA and about $20 each to do. Those gland nuts are on tight. If I ever do mine again, I will just buy new cylinder. baileynet.com has aftermarket replacement cylinders for like $50. For me, spending half a day and cursing like a sailor isnt worth trying to save $30 per cylinder. And since the rods are pitted, a new rod + seal kit would be even more than the whole cylinder.
New hardware needed all around too, of course. Gave the impact wrench a bit of a workout...
Stainless would probabally be a worthwhile investment here.
I got a rough quote of $200-300 for sandblasting which seems high to me. I may just rent a blaster and give it a try myself. Next step will probably be later this summer when I hope to get more time. I need some time to gather parts too.
200-300 doesnt sound bad at all if that is everything. The cost of renting a blaster + sand + a days worth of dirty and nasty work......
Go ahead and rent one if you want, but afterword I'll bet you think differently about 200-300 being high.
Good luck and keep us posted on your rebuild:thumbsup: