HamishMacCheap
Bronze Member
- Joined
- Oct 26, 2024
- Messages
- 97
- Location
- South Carolina
- Tractor
- John Deere 3043, Kubota LX2610SU, Kubota L3302
I think Kubota recommends the FEL on my LX2610 be greased every 10 hours. I follow their recommendations.
How do you like that machine?I think Kubota recommends the FEL on my LX2610 be greased every 10 hours. I follow their recommendations.
Different equipment different needs. A one off nobody can plan for. If I was in construction it would be a different story.That's all well and good until you rent a skid steer and the track pops off. Try refilling the grease on that with a manual grease gun. Your hands/forearms will hate you.
Lock and lube yellow gun.I used to think about getting new grease in my 5 gallon grease bucket that refilled hand grease guns. Wish I had done it years ago.
Easier and faster than changing a tube of grease. Best used with a grease gun that the rod comes out as the grease gun is filled
Never have an air problem.
Does anybody have a recommendation for a good quality pistol grip grease gun?
Mine are old and failing
I had 4. One for each shed. I'm down to one. And it's leaking past the plunger. I'm wishing I had looked into fixing the others.
The guns I have bought since, suck
A lot of squeezing and not much grease pumping.
Sad to say, my wife had done all of the greasing this year.
How does that equate to hours? My skidsteer I do them every 10 hours. Over kill but if I forget or get busy I'm still good and do them at next 10 hour. Newer tractors are 50 hour fittings, older Tractors are 10 hour. I do them at 25 hour. All are done per hour meter on equipment. Still overkill because obviously there is running but no movement.I like to grease my skid steer and excavator bucket pins every 1/2 tank of fuel and the rest of the pins every tank of fuel. I’m not sure what you’re greasing every 100 hours.
You're right! But at the same time, 24 zerks on a zero turn seems kinda ridiculous. Didn't anyone tell Kubota the rest of the world switched over to sealed bearings for most applications, 40 years ago?
Even the idlers on my 2007 Deere mower deck are all sealed bearings, the only greasible things there are the three main spindles. Everything else that gets greased on that machine is a non-bearing pivot, such as mower deck trailing arms and brake linkage.
Most sealed bearings have a service life that's many times longer than the lifespan of a commercial zero turn mower, so they're an ideal application case.
10 operating would be my assumption. I grease loader as I feel it needs done. Just like all my implements I guesstimate the hours it’s run. If handling round or square bales. Loader gets done every day otherwise whenever I feel it needs itI always wondered if the recommendation is for 10 engine operating hours or 10 hours using the loader.
We always used Boraxo Heavy Duty at the machine shop but learned Borax can cause health issues?Here is a used grease gun I found online. Only $200. Looks like it's had a pretty easy life and been well taken care of . . .
View attachment 3829914
I've observed that grease is messy and greasy. I just keep plain old cheap paper towels next to the grease gun and use as needed. Buy yourself a can of those GOJO or Fast Orange hand-wipes to help final cleanup -- they're worth every penny.
PS -- Decided not to buy the grease gun . . .
I agree, on tractors, but much less so on mowers. Zero turn mowers are 2500 hour or 20 year machines, and most sealed bearings are rated way beyond those numbers.Sealed bearings ought to last longer, but I cannot help noticing that in the last 50 years or so I've replaced a lot more ruined sealed bearings than I have greaseable ones.
Or when it’s 0 degrees out side.An electric grease gun doesn't have a huge benefit for most homeowner size machines. But get a BIG machine like an industrial backhoe or giant farm tractor with huge attachments that have a lot of fittings and you'll get to appreciate one pretty quick if you grease it regularly. Not everybody works with small stuff.
Here is a used grease gun I found online. Only $200. Looks like it's had a pretty easy life and been well taken care of . . .
View attachment 3829914
I've observed that grease is messy and greasy. I just keep plain old cheap paper towels next to the grease gun and use as needed. Buy yourself a can of those GOJO or Fast Orange hand-wipes to help final cleanup -- they're worth every penny.
PS -- Decided not to buy the grease gun . . .
Ummmmm, my LX2610SU says every 10H on the FEL. I probably do it a bit more often because of experience with draglines and some wonderful stuff called crater grease. I ruined a few company cars when I was doing draglines service. Same numbers apply to my grapple. I kinda play it by ear. If it looks like it wants grease, I give it some grease. When red tacky grease turns black, I kinda figure it should be replaced with more red tacky grease. If I have a heavy day of loader work, I’ll typically grease the loader because it’s my friend that has really changed the way I work. I do it more to push out things that like to find their way into places they shouldn’t be. I use a general purpose lithium grease for anything that has bearings in it and red tacky for anything that I know doesn’t make a complete revolution but has a lot of pressure on it.Recommended service schedule for pedal and brake linkage on tractor and zero turn is 100 hours or annual. Tractor trunion and mower spindles are spec'd for 50 hours or twice annual. FEL pins are also spec'd at 50 hours, which is about 2x per year for me.
Borax has very serious health issues for cockroaches. Think about it, the ONE creature that will likely survive a nuclear holocaust has problems with borax. There’s your sign……We always used Boraxo Heavy Duty at the machine shop but learned Borax can cause health issues?
I wonder how all the folks in Trona CA faired living ground zero for Borax?
Ummmmm, my LX2610SU says every 10H on the FEL.
JD says every 10 hours for the FEL.
It retails for $169 bare tool or $230 with a battery and charger.
Maybe! Grease is certainly a heck of a lot cheaper than re-bushing a loader and replacing the pins.Of course no one sits in one spot and moves the loader up and down and curling and dumping for 10 hours straight. I look at it that if I have the loader on and am using it off and on for 10 hours it needs greased.