Kevkx125
Well-known member
That oil drain is nicely constructed, nice job!!
What I ended up doing, at least on this section, is starting on one edge, and pushing it all towards the other edge with the mower. In this pic, the pole barn is directly to the left of where I’m standing. To the right is the creek that runs the length of my property. The edge isn’t a straight drop off, it’s terraced. So the clippings went on that terrace. The water level may never reach that high, and it’s not easily accessed by humans. I may clear the brush line and make it accessible eventually.On the mowing, While it wasn't acres, and only a walk behind, I used to use a side throw, and started at the upside and mowed all around the edge, and worked in to the middle throwing the clippings to the uncut part. Each pass further clipped the clippings finer. Worked great and if the last pass threw clumps I just re cut and scattered the clumps. Worked so well I much later bought a mulching walk behind. and it did well also.



Last time I had a issue like that I removing the last bolt worked wonders................................................Fought with the wheel on the lawn tractor some more. SOB still won't come off. PB fluid, hammer, wheel puller, heat. Everything I've tried and it's just laughing at me while still firmly stuck on the shaft.
I'm about to take a sawsall to it and just cut the darn thing off.

Someone else may have mentioned it, have you tried putting all the nuts on loose and riding it around? go forward fast and hit the brakes, then do the same in reverse. Make some hard turns at speed, in both directions.Fought with the wheel on the lawn tractor some more. SOB still won't come off. PB fluid, hammer, wheel puller, heat. Everything I've tried and it's just laughing at me while still firmly stuck on the shaft.
I'm about to take a sawsall to it and just cut the darn thing off.




Whatcha Y-Fyin'?Grabbed an esp8266 chip off the pile.
There are no bolts. Just a washer and a snap ring. I did find a video that recommended using an air chisel to vibrate the axel while pulling on the wheel to help break it free. I'll try that tomorrow.Someone else may have mentioned it, have you tried putting all the nuts on loose and riding it around? go forward fast and hit the brakes, then do the same in reverse. Make some hard turns at speed, in both directions.
I'm building my own IoT ecology. I don't want to wake up one morning and find that "they" have discontinued my product, sold my info, decided to bill me, you-name-it. I currently have some decorations that I did a first go at. They are mechanically perfect, but I want better software functionality. Then comes smart plugs, and hopefully some cams, and maybe a weather station.Whatcha Y-Fyin'?
I have reflashed some custom things but clueless on writing code myself. Play in the winter on some electronics but past winter was spent in the wood shop, previous winter was 3D printer shtuff. Last electronic build was a custom flashlight. Has magnetic charge cable, does some neat stuff but I didn't write the firmware. But the soldering and other mods I did. Small, uses 18350 cell. Still carry it and it even survived the washing machine. That was the main reason for for the magnetic charge connector, waterproof. Arduino always intrigued me but no time to fall into that rabbit hole.I'm building my own IoT ecology. I don't want to wake up one morning and find that "they" have discontinued my product, sold my info, decided to bill me, you-name-it. I currently have some decorations that I did a first go at. They are mechanically perfect, but I want better software functionality. Then comes smart plugs, and hopefully some cams, and maybe a weather station.
The programming is the best part. Its what makes everything go. I wrote software for 40-some years. I find it's nice to just be able to code on inspiration, with no deadlines.I have reflashed some custom things but clueless on writing code myself. Play in the winter on some electronics but past winter was spent in the wood shop, previous winter was 3D printer shtuff. Last electronic build was a custom flashlight. Has magnetic charge cable, does some neat stuff but I didn't write the firmware. But the soldering and other mods I did. Small, uses 18350 cell. Still carry it and it even survived the washing machine. That was the main reason for for the magnetic charge connector, waterproof. Arduino always intrigued me but no time to fall into that rabbit hole.
Ahh! I was thinking it had lug nuts. Would it be difficult to take the whole spindle off? That way you could place the wheel on something solid and hammer the axle out? Obviously don't mushroom the end of the axle. A brass hammer or you can use anything softer than steel to protect the axle.There are no bolts. Just a washer and a snap ring. I did find a video that recommended using an air chisel to vibrate the axel while pulling on the wheel to help break it free. I'll try that tomorrow.
If the air chisel doesn't work, I'll take a look at something like that. It's a small lawn tractor and I think the rear wheels are hydraulic drive. Not sure how much work it'd be to pull the axel.Ahh! I was thinking it had lug nuts. Would it be difficult to take the whole spindle off? That way you could place the wheel on something solid and hammer the axle out? Obviously don't mushroom the end of the axle. A brass hammer or you can use anything softer than steel to protect the axle.
I was thinking it was a front wheel, but since it's the rear, you're probably having issues with rust and a battered Key Or keyway. A couple 4x4's against a wall, and the other end of the 4x4's against the wheel might allow you to hit the axle through the wheel.If the air chisel doesn't work, I'll take a look at something like that. It's a small lawn tractor and I think the rear wheels are hydraulic drive. Not sure how much work it'd be to pull the axel.
I've also considered just taking a saw to it, cutting the thing off and buying a new one... but we'll save that for last.
Been there done that, also with a 12" disc sander. Had gloves on, got sucked in, got fingertips wedged between table and disc hard enough to stop it from turning. Ground down the side of my left index finger. Good times.12" disk sander
Have you tried this method?Fought with the wheel on the lawn tractor some more. SOB still won't come off. PB fluid, hammer, wheel puller, heat. Everything I've tried and it's just laughing at me while still firmly stuck on the shaft.
I'm about to take a sawsall to it and just cut the darn thing off.
