ritcheyvs
Veteran Member
For those that don't know, DK models use a "wet" clutch stack to engage the PTO. If you have seen a motorcycle clutch pack or car auto transmission clutch stack, it's like that. The clutch is engaged by a hydraulic piston that gets a couple hundred psi from the power steering side of the hydraulic pump when the electrical PTO solenoid is powered. There are a couple different plumbing arrangements (reason I asked if it was a DK, DKs, or DKSE); one uses a modulator valve upstream of the PS circuit and the other uses a regulator downstream of the PS circuit. Clearly a lot of heat got dumped into the transmission, and probably not by conduction from the engine. The two likely ways to heat up that oil (and all that transmission metal) are deadheaded hydraulics and a slipping clutch. If that PTO clutch started slipping, a great deal of mechanical energy would become heat in the clutch pack which seems most likely considering the seals at the PTO clutch piston (and maybe others nearby) were destroyed. Also, once any of those seals leak substantially, the piston would lose pressure and allow even more slipping; a chain reaction. That's what I suspect happened here. But why? Was the clutch friction material contaminated with the wrong (old style) hydraulic fluid, which is not suitable for wet brakes or clutches? Were the clutch seals already compromised and leaky? Did the hydraulic system fail to provide sufficient pressure to the PTO clutch piston? Was the system simply overloaded? I guess we'll never know. But I'll never try to run a 3000 lb 8 ft mower behind my DK45s after reading this saga.