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Air reg

sberry

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Jun 18, 2005
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35,747
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Brethren, Michigan
I basically finished this. We left a whip on it that was there, could be eliminated but it was to go to short hose and by pass reel if needed but its rare. I drained the water from the filter tonight, a month of general work net about a teaspoon. There is no drip leg prior to the filter.
 

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sberry

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Messages
35,747
Location
Brethren, Michigan
One of the hoses that leave the reg feed that reel and the other feeds another pipe which goes to 2 whips on the hoist and down to the paint area for a general use reel and a regulated one for paint gun. Simple valve turns it off, they are rarely used.
 

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sberry

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All to fix a ragged stuck grinding e brake, work on a tractor.
 

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kbs2244

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Nov 11, 2006
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14,065
Oh man,
How often do you split a tractor?
My 3rd generation JD user uncle considered that a dealer only job.
 
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sberry

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I had this one apart for a seal about 3 years ago, might have it apart once before but cant recall. The biggest issue is dripping oil lines. I don't care for all the fussy hydraulic stuff. It ranks right up there with driveability on cars, I don't know much to start with and don't do it all the time.
A tractor split for a clutch is a straight forward deal, very predictable about like a car or pickup truck. I had this apart so I took it apart some more. Its all super old and every seal and gasket is hard, I got to take an assembly apart yet to find the problem I was looking for.
I had it all cleaned up, its beemn sitting here all winter in some kind of disrepair and I was going to paint it but may delay that and want it all housebroke.
People think I like doing this stuff and its really not the case. I got to do it and want to make it as easy as I can, one can make that as hard as the other but it can also have long term gains.
I am more of a stock car guy and firefighter. I don't care for tedious rebuilding and got absolutely no interest in sitting at a lathe. Same for welding. I do what I have to do to get what I want or what is in the way.
A little like the KOO from Canada, got to fix it or you don't go. We had a pin seize on a dozer, busted a shackle off. The bad news was it was broke and would take 2 or 3 hrs, basically kill half a day to fix, the good news was 3 hrs later it was repaired without parts and 15 minutes of welding.
Rebuilding cars is too tedious. At the rated he quoted I would hire that American restoration guy. I cant farm it out, my Dad did a lot of that with an old timer back in the day, did all the car and truck work as some insane reasonable price and did a good job.
Today the cost would be astronomical, we know where we are at with it, we can drive a lot of stuff anymore till its just broke.
Not only can we care for things but older common cars and some other stuff we can simply drive till its junk. My wifes junker here, not rebuilding but fix the stuff that keeps rolling and it has hit a level here I am looking at replacement in the event of a major component failure. I did some front end work, got 2 days labor and 500 in parts in 2 years of brutal service.
I included a rotor shot for giggles, the backside is about 1/2 good. Ice, rust had messed with parking brake and was making noise, sounded like more of a problem than it was but the thing still has 50% pad on the same ruined rotors I stuck pads on a year ago and I grease the pins, scuff the slides, knock the rust off and stick it back on.
Made sure the fronts were free and rotated the tires.
 
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sberry

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The bad kews is the tractor is broke, the good news it really doesn't cost much and if I would have worked on it continuous or had a demand for it the thing would have been fixed pronto.
We had one a while back all of a sudden spit hyd fluid, my brother started yakking about needing to rebuild this and that and I said, oh no,, we remove the obstruction and pull a plate off a valve body and I already knew I had a replacement seal, sure as sheet a rust flake had formed and all of a sudden let loose. Whole rest of the thing was ok, had been reman about 15 yrs ago so wasn't all oem aged. Had it running in an hour.
It doesn't always work that way but we are set up for pit stop type work as much as outright reman.
 
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sberry

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Messages
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Location
Brethren, Michigan
I have saved, I have sorted and am not a compulsive hoarder and look for chances to used saved materials. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. Cant mix the good with the junk.
I have been on a single minded compulsive strip out of the shop. I did a lot of other work along the way,,, ha Wired and plumbed for a month each while I was doing it. There are a lot of garages full of junk but even the more refined ones can use a facelift, I just added a hose reel, been fixing stuff that has lagged or simply become part of the landscape since the early days.
I have been refining right down to the number of spare 5 gallon buckets and new hangers fopr wrenches right as we go thru this job, removing pieces from the area and replacing with new ones to let it glide
 

KJINTF

Member
Joined
Jan 21, 2016
Messages
19
Location
Alaska
Tractors always something to fix
Great to see others that do the work needed
Welding skills come in handy with these things
 
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