mars1952
Silver Member
- Joined
- Jan 12, 2007
- Messages
- 238
- Location
- Western North Carolina
- Tractor
- 1999 John Deere 4300 12/12 sync-reverse
I don't have a Ranger but I did notice that is one of the best home videos I've ever seen. Very detailed and we didn't have to take a roller coaster ride while viewing.
Is there any chance the Ranger can be operated with the brake set unknowingly ( not set tight enough ) or is there an indicator light etc?
In the 1950s and earlier 2-1/2 etc. ton farm trucks had a hand brake with a band on a drive line drum. If it wasn't maintained well or set tight enough when parking, it would often be just hot enough to set a wheat field on fire about the time the county road was reached. Not a good thing.
Also while watching I couldn't help but wonder if one couldn't make his own pads from a better material and epoxy them to the plate. I use old automotive pads to make them for my lawn tractor but no epoxy involved there. And I have shimmed them with a thin piece of wood to get a few more miles.![]()
Hi SandburRanch: Thanks for the compliment.
I read a post on another forum where the author had purchased a set of riveted automotive brake pads. He drilled out the rivets and re-riveted them to the Ranger plates after grinding them to the correct shape. He claimed they worked well but he had to use longer brake assembly parts since the pads were thicker than the OEM pads.
Mars