Soundguy
Old Timer
- Joined
- Mar 11, 2002
- Messages
- 51,575
- Location
- Central florida
- Tractor
- RK 55HC,ym1700, NH7610S, Ford 8N, 2N, NAA, 660, 850 x2, 541, 950, 941D, 951, 2000, 3000, 4000, 4600, 5000, 740, IH 'C' 'H', CUB, John Deere 'B', allis 'G', case VAC
more disc\'n on plain gear trany vs shuttle / hydro
First... this is meant to be light hearted discussion/observation... not fuel for gear vs hydro flame wars... ( ok guys? )
After reading a couple of the tractor subs for the last week, it seems there has been a decent amount of failures arising on the hydro and shuttle trannies resulting from simple things such as loose wires, or wires that are run in precarious location under a tractor where mud, brush, and debri are IMHO very likely to snag on these wires.
Also noted was the difficulty in diagnosing the problem, when the unit wouldn't move at all, or not move in one direction.. or when some ominous 'disengaged light was on.. or some non-descript error code displayed.
The very thought that an important wire would be run in such a way that it can be snatched out by brush so easilly baffles me. One poster wrote that they got under their tractor and found a wire connection pulled apart. Now.. it may just be me.. but I think the engineer that built that was smoking something he shouldn't have been. After all... a tractor is pretty much the epitome of 'heavy duty rugged service vehicle'. It is meant to tear thru underbrush and light debri.. etc. wires hanging out all over it seem... um... like poor design? no?
For those of us plain 'gear' tranny people.. we need to remember this the next time the heat gets turned up by the hydro and shuttle people. /forums/images/graemlins/wink.gif /forums/images/graemlins/smirk.gif
Soundguy
First... this is meant to be light hearted discussion/observation... not fuel for gear vs hydro flame wars... ( ok guys? )
After reading a couple of the tractor subs for the last week, it seems there has been a decent amount of failures arising on the hydro and shuttle trannies resulting from simple things such as loose wires, or wires that are run in precarious location under a tractor where mud, brush, and debri are IMHO very likely to snag on these wires.
Also noted was the difficulty in diagnosing the problem, when the unit wouldn't move at all, or not move in one direction.. or when some ominous 'disengaged light was on.. or some non-descript error code displayed.
The very thought that an important wire would be run in such a way that it can be snatched out by brush so easilly baffles me. One poster wrote that they got under their tractor and found a wire connection pulled apart. Now.. it may just be me.. but I think the engineer that built that was smoking something he shouldn't have been. After all... a tractor is pretty much the epitome of 'heavy duty rugged service vehicle'. It is meant to tear thru underbrush and light debri.. etc. wires hanging out all over it seem... um... like poor design? no?
For those of us plain 'gear' tranny people.. we need to remember this the next time the heat gets turned up by the hydro and shuttle people. /forums/images/graemlins/wink.gif /forums/images/graemlins/smirk.gif
Soundguy