Maintenence Questions

   / Maintenence Questions #1  

Anonymous Poster

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Being a New owner of a FX28D I want to establish a maintenance schedule and book for my machine.

Some items need routine maintenance and fluid changes, others need inspection.

I intend to clean the machine after each use to try to avoid rust.

Oil and Filter change every 50 hours and at the end of the season (to avoid acids left in the oil). Rotella 15W-40 diesel oil. Any info on whether premium filters are worthwhile would be nice. check the level before each use.

Front gear box oil 80-90 weight oil. Check weekly unless leak noticed. How often to change?

Hydro/transmission fluid check daily. JD apparently makes appropriate fluid, but which one? How often to check the screen?

Grease fittings--grease every month.

Diesel fuel-- how often to put injector cleaner in. Any lay up procedure.

Is there a power steering fluid to check? how often.

Do you need to start and run on a regular basis to prevent rust in the cylinders? How often.

Put a drop of oil on screws/bolts nnow and then.

Wax fenders every 6 months., touch up paint.

Mower--clear after use keep greased.

Tiller oil in chain drive, keep fittings greased

What else?

I guess that an organized plan would be a good thing to post for each model with each model's idiosynchracies would be good.
 
   / Maintenence Questions #2  
Dude, it's a tractor, your not going to the moon with it.
Ok Ok I know it sounds sarcastic, but please don't take it that way. It was meant to be humorous. As a licensed A&P mechanic I'm still flabbergasted that there is a pilot out there that actually knows anything about preventitive maintenance.
My hat is off to you sir.
With that said I would add check for proper tire pressures, and change anti-freeze every 2 years. That is when the corrosion preventitive stops working.
......A pilot worried about maintenance, that's amazing........
 
   / Maintenence Questions
  • Thread Starter
#3  
Hey, my life depends on my airplane. Everything works all the time (even with this I've had an electrical failure, a vaccum pump failure, and a stuck ILS glideslope needle)--I love backup systems. My life may not depend on my tractor, but if you take good care of machinery rather than ignoring it until something breaks it lasts alot longer. A little TLC on a regular basis will make it outlive me. Without the knowlege of what to do, I might ignore something and cost myself alot of money.
 
   / Maintenence Questions #4  
I understand exactly what you mean. All of my experience is on the big stuff, so that means I am responsible for thousands of lives every day. We are drilled with pay attention to detail, do it right the first time, and if it even LOOKS marginal change it. That training bleeds over to my home life and my tractor. Proper torque, proper lubing, and I safety wired the wheel mounting bolts. It pays to be cautious.
 
   / Maintenence Questions
  • Thread Starter
#5  
It pays to do it right, rather than something that just works for the moment. Aircraft operate in an unforgiving environment (king of like the operating room during the spine surgery that I used to do). I always said that 3 things can go wrong in an airplane, the fourth one kills you (night is one, IFR is asecond, mountains is a third--doesn't take much at that point---but day VFR its awfully hard to have enought things fail to kill you). In any event, good maintenance keeps things working right.
 
   / Maintenence Questions #6  
Don't know about the FX model, but here is the maintenance schedule from the YM169d manual (pretty close to the 1401d and others). Attactment is a PDF file. Open with Adobe Acrobat Reader, available from www.adobe.com for free, and then print it out.
Jim
 
   / Maintenence Questions #7  
I think 50 hr intervals on the oild change is kinda close. My NH 1920 states 100. But got with whatever feels good to you, if you want to do it more often.

Soundguy
 
   / Maintenence Questions
  • Thread Starter
#8  
Well my car manual says 7500 miles, but I change the oil every 3000 miles. My boat says 50 hours. Generally engines (albeit gasoline) with filters go 50 hours those without go 25 hours.
 
   / Maintenence Questions #9  
I personally believe that the ones that make the engines, know more about them than we do. They know at what time is the best time to change their oils and filters and other things. They want you to get the best service, for your money so you will buy from them again. The oil companys of course want you to change more often, they make more money that way. But of course that is just my opinion, each one can do what they want. I am 69 years old and have had a lot of different ones and had real good "luck" as they call it, by following the times to change that they have said.
 
   / Maintenence Questions
  • Thread Starter
#10  
I agree that the oil companies want you to change more often. Of course, I guess the question is whether the manual is written to provide the longest service and when do you get diminishing returns (you could change the oil every day, but you'd spend more on oil than a new engine and only eliminate certain types of failures). I'm new to diesels and just looking for info.

Thanks for the opinion.
 

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