Forum › Forums › Tractor Troubleshooting › jimna 254 4wd binding up
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October 16, 2015 at 2:27 pm #31084
When I have the tractor in 4wd and moving, at each revolution of the wheels the front drive binds up several times. I know there are no front brakes but, it feels as though I am pumping the front brakes while moving. If a push the clutch in when moving the tractor comes to an abrupt stop from the front wheels. I checked the balls in the drive shaft and there good. I have removed the cover on the transfer case and ran the tractor both on the ground as well as on blocks. there is no binding or any issues while on blocks. After playing around with this for a month I decided to drop the entire front axle assembly. I pulled the top cover off the differential and every thing seems to work as it should. I dropped both finial drive assemblies and pulled the differential axles, they look good. I cant figure it out. Seems like there is a bent axle or something rubbing hard to create this issue. Its making me crazy. If I drive in 4wd at a steady speed the tractor starts to hobby horse do to the front drive binding up. Can anyone shed some light on this issue
Thanks Redjetster
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October 16, 2015 at 6:45 pm #38130
You may want to look at the transfer case to see if teeth are missing on those gears, we had a similar problem in the shop and that was the issue.
Trevor Nystrom
Keno Tractors
Parts Department
541-850-8193
866-363-8193
Tyler Nystrom
Keno Tractors
parts@kenotractors.com
866-363-8193
Phone hours: M-F 8am to 5:30pm PST Sat 9am to 1pm PST -
October 17, 2015 at 8:21 am #38132
I would be tempted to remove the front drive driveshaft as a quick test that would isolate the front end but the drive line to it would still be active. But if it is magnified to the point you can feel it only under load this might not tell you much., but it might too.
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October 17, 2015 at 4:26 pm #38134
Thanks for your help Trevor and David.
I spent today looking at everything. Every single part is disassembled from the transfer case forward. All bearings and gears look good. I checked the gears in transfer case carefully and they are fine. I looked in the gearbox and carefully checked the claw going into and out of 4wd I can't even think of what else to try.
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October 19, 2015 at 10:06 am #38136
Take the 4 x 4 shaft off, jack up the front end, turn the front wheels see if they turn free , they should turn in opposite directions.The problem could be in the center 4 x 4 pumpkin or in one of the front driving shafts.You will just have to isolate them one at a time.We have all the parts in stock, we also have a complete center pumpkin ready to bolt in as well as complete drive assemblies depending on your mechanical abilities we can help with just parts or the assembly
Tommy
Affordable Tractor Sales
“Your Jinma Parts Superstore”
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October 19, 2015 at 5:08 pm #38138
I did that before pulling everything apart. I am going to reassemble everything and leave the cover off the gear box and move the tractor in 4wd when it binds up I'll stop and try to see if I can isolate where the problem is. I will look at the mechanism in the box that engages the 4wd drive first, I notice that when it binds up I cannot easily pull it out of 4wd. I will try to visually see what is happening in there and the transfer case. I am going to do this without oil in the box. I only have to move a foot or two for it to bind. Next I will try jacking up one front wheel at a time to see if it will release the torke. I don't want to start buying expensive parts without knowing for sure if those parts are truly bad. If I can isolate the problem to one area I'll buy that assembly. Hopefully I can find the correct test that will reveal the bad parts. Its now a guessing game.
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October 20, 2015 at 12:52 am #38139
Jetster-
This may be far-fetched, but did you look at the 'claws' that need to connect for 4-wheel drive to see if there are any problems? (see picture below)
ronjin
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October 20, 2015 at 5:48 pm #38144
I did check the claw as well as the gears in the transfer case before disassembling of complete front axle. At a loss as to what could be wrong, I am going to reassemble everything and run the tractor on the ground without oil in the transmission, transfer case and front drive. Without oil and top of transmission off I just might be able to see something weird happen and finally get to the real problem.
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October 20, 2015 at 6:46 pm #38145
I would be tempted to use something like assembly lube on critical mating surfaces just in case you end up running it a little longer than you would have wanted to.
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October 22, 2015 at 9:02 pm #38155
Well, I give up. I can't find one thing that could cause this problem. Everything looks and works as it should. I put everything back together and still have the same problem. I will oil up everything and run it until something breaks. Out of ideas and tired of playing with this issue.
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October 22, 2015 at 9:02 pm #38156
Well, I give up. I can't find one thing that could cause this problem. Everything looks and works as it should. I put everything back together and still have the same problem. I will oil up everything and run it until something breaks. Out of ideas and tired of playing with this issue.
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October 24, 2015 at 4:56 pm #38165
so when you took the propeller shaft out to front axle did the problem still exist?
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October 24, 2015 at 7:12 pm #38166
Inquiring minds want to know.
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October 24, 2015 at 7:31 pm #38167
No Problem with drive shaft out, no 4wd either.
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October 24, 2015 at 11:55 pm #38168
Jetster,
There was a statement in your first post that is still bothering me. It said:
“If a push the clutch in when moving the tractor comes to an abrupt stop from the front wheels”
If you still have the energy to pursue the problem, I have a couple of thoughts. (tractor reassembled if required)
Can you put the tractor on a downward incline, engine off, in 4-wheel drive, clutch out and brakes off.
Does it roll?
Now push clutch in.
Does it roll?
Now try those same two actions with the engine running.
What were the results?
ronjin
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October 24, 2015 at 11:59 pm #38169
That one had/has me scratching my head
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October 25, 2015 at 9:40 am #38170
do you have a loader on the tractor? If so there has been problems with the front axles assm. with overloading the buckets and running on real ruff terrain or getting them stuck with the front wheels turned on angle . A friend of mine just went threw this with a older Kubota.
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October 26, 2015 at 4:09 pm #45277
Are you a new owner? Has it done this since you bought it? This is faarr out there but, . . . I bought a parts truck that did this after I got it running, it had different gear ratios between front and rear diffs. Are you positive the right size tires are on it?
Code 347 CLDTI
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October 26, 2015 at 11:03 pm #45310
RonJ, I Tried what you suggested, I rolled down hill in 4wd clutch in, then clutch out. Did same thing with heavy load in loader. With load its not as noticeable since the load carries tractor downhill with force of the extra weight but the problem is still there.
David, I would love to know if and how your friend corrected his problem.
Fido. I owned this tractor since new in 2006. This problem started about a year ago and has gotten progressively worse. I have the same tires since new.Everything on the tractor is original.
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October 27, 2015 at 5:46 am #45317
So the tractor would roll downhill with the clutch in or out.
Please clarify what was meant in your first post by:
“If a push the clutch in when moving the tractor comes to an abrupt stop from the front wheels”ronjin
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October 27, 2015 at 12:46 pm #45321
RonJ,
Both, clutch in and then clutch out. I did this loaded and then unloaded.-
October 27, 2015 at 4:26 pm #45340
Sounds like your brakes are stuck. Once had one like that.
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October 27, 2015 at 7:12 pm #45352
Then this:
“If a push the clutch in when moving the tractor comes to an abrupt stop from the front wheels”
is no longer happening?ronjin
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October 27, 2015 at 11:16 pm #45372
Agpro4x4, There are no brakes in front axle.
Ronj, Nothing has changed, still binds up as before.
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October 27, 2015 at 11:21 pm #45373
ok I will get that info. but I believe it was a gear with some missing teeth and bad bearings, but I will get a confirmation on that
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October 27, 2015 at 11:23 pm #45374
Jester,
Let me try my question a different way-When you are moving along in 4-wheel drive and you depress the clutch – what happens?
ronjin
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October 28, 2015 at 1:24 pm #45396
The tractor comes to an immediate hard stop.
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October 28, 2015 at 2:11 pm #45397
ok I got a verification on went wrong with his tractor it was the spindle bearings which fell apart and wiped out the gears. I do not believe that is your problem. But what you are saying that with the tractor in 2 wheel drive the tractor operates normally. Only when in 4 wheel you feel the problem. Is this correct?
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October 28, 2015 at 2:50 pm #45412
Jetster,
Let me summarize since the info is now spread over several messages.1. When driving in 4-wheel drive at a steady speed, the tractor starts to hobby horse due to the front drive binding up.
2. When driving in 4-wheel drive, if the clutch is depressed, the tractor is stopped by the front wheels with no actual tractor brakes applied.
3. When sitting on a downward incline with tractor in 4-wheel drive, the tractor will roll down the hill whether the clutch is In or Out and whether the engine is running or not. It does not stop or slow down unless the actual tractor brakes are applied.
Are these all correct? If not, please clarify.
I have some thoughts but it will take me some time to describe them properly.
Also I would not use 4-wheel drive until the problem has been resolvedronjin
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October 28, 2015 at 6:26 pm #45421
David, what you are saying is correct. Thanks for looking into this for me.
RonJ, your statement #1 and 2 is correct. #3 is correct except while rolling down hill I do feel the binding at each revolution of the wheels and the tractor does stop sooner than it would if this problem did not exist. I also explained that I did the same tests with a heavy load in the bucket. The extra weight helped to carry the tractor further down hill but the problem was still there.
I appreciate all your attention to my problem.
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October 28, 2015 at 6:48 pm #45424
I think there is something about gear ratios or tire sizes being wrong ,the reason I say that is if in 2 wheel drive everything is turning just not connected under power, when 4 wheel is engaged then you have 2 things turning on the same ground speed but powered at different speeds , so it binds .everything must match within factory plus and minus windows. I have heard of new back tires and bald fronts giving issues. I guess you could mark the rear and front tires roll the tractor one revolution one the rear and the front should turn more than once but the marks should be in the same place once the one turn has been made. well I think anyway.
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October 29, 2015 at 2:55 am #45457
Jetster,
Your problem presented a challenge. I have thought about it for some time and spent time with all of the exploded parts pictures I have. There may be nothing new here that you have not considered, but I have now gotten the thoughts out of my head.
Situation:
1. When driving in 4-wheel drive at a steady speed, the tractor starts to hobby horse due to the front drive binding up.
2. When driving in 4-wheel drive, if the clutch is depressed, the tractor is stopped by the front wheels with no actual tractor brakes applied.
3. When sitting on a downward incline with tractor in 4-wheel drive, the tractor will roll down the hill whether the clutch is In or Out and whether the engine is running or not. There is a feeling of ‘binding’ with each rotation of wheels, but tractor does not stop or slow down unless the actual tractor brakes are applied.Normal 4-wheel Drive Operation – forward motion
Clutch engaged:
Engine is driving the transmission and through the ‘claws’ the front drive shaft is engaged. The engine is forcing the forward gears of the transmission and therefore the front and rear axles to move the tractor in a forward direction.Clutch dis-engaged:
Engine is disconnected from transmission. Transmission is now potentially free-wheeling, but the tractor wheels are still in motion. The tractor wheels are now driving the transmission gears, allowing tractor to continue in direction it was traveling prior to clutch dis-engagement.Jetster’s 4-wheel Drive Operation
Clutch engaged:
Engine is driving the transmission and through the ‘claws’ the front drive shaft is engaged. The engine is forcing the forward gears of the transmission and therefore the front and rear axles to move the tractor in a forward direction. There is a ‘binding’ indicating that the front wheels do not want to do what the engine/transmission is forcing it to do.Clutch dis-engaged:
Engine is disconnected from transmission. Transmission is now potentially free-wheeling. The rear wheels are trying to drive the transmission gears in a forward direction. The front wheels do not want to move in a forward direction and cause the tractor to stop.RonJ opinion (prior to results of Situation 3 above):
There is something forward of the ‘claw’ on the front drive shaft that is binding. I recommend that the tractor not be driven since this must put significant strain on those 2 claws.I do not understand why when Jetster was coasting down the grade in 4-wheel drive, the tractor did not stop whenever the clutch was dis-engaged on the downhill run. Unless there was too much inertia from the rear wheels that over-rode the front axle resistance resulting in the feeling of binding rather than stopping.
What I would do:
Remove the front tires (to reduce the weight) and raise the front end.
Determine the rotation of the front drive shaft to move wheels for a forward motion.
Verify that the shaft coming out of the front of the Transfer Case is turning the right direction.
Rotate the front drive shaft in that direction to try to locate the ‘resisting’ parts.ronjin
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October 31, 2015 at 9:22 am #45520
RonJ
When the tractor rolled down hill I did feel the binding . The tractor did eventually stop hard as the ground started to level out.
I jacked up the entire tractor and turned the drive shaft using a pipe wrench I didn’t feel anything unusual.
I then laid under the tractor and turned the front wheels together in the forward direction, then in reverse. This caused all wheels to turn while in 4wd. Although hard to turn wheels like this there were no parts of the rotation which increased in resistance.
But as I said in an earlier post without weight on wheels everything works fine.
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October 31, 2015 at 12:09 pm #45533
this is so weird like with load you have a shaft that gets torqued and flexes and binds, I am going to be quite interested on what finally shows up as the problem. Have you tried jacking it up and letting it run in gear using a mechanics stethoscope ? Talk about a grasp at straws.
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October 31, 2015 at 1:59 pm #45535
Can this problem be caused by a cracked, bent or broken axle? I’m just wondering if when there’s weight on the front end that a cracked, bent or broken axle would cause the gears to bind as they are not aligned properly.
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November 1, 2015 at 10:24 pm #45552
David, I have not tries a stethoscope. I do not have one, I’ll get one this week.
Bert, I had all shafts out of front drive, all gears, bearings and splines look including drive shaft. I saw nothing unusual. There is something I am missing.
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November 1, 2015 at 11:10 pm #45553
Jetster,
Sometimes when there have been some strange noises, etc on the transmission, there have been recommendations to overfill and run them for a period of time.
Do you think that might be worth trying on you front axle?
ronjin
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November 1, 2015 at 11:35 pm #45554
I’ll be interested in the outcome of this. It sure has all the earmarks of a missing tooth on the ring or pinion.
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November 2, 2015 at 11:26 am #45566
Jester,
After going back and reading the entire thread from the start, I think that David was on the right track with his remarks about the tires. You said that you have had the tractor since new, everything is original and that the problem has been getting worse over the last year.
Somewhere in the past I have read that you can not mix tire types. That is to say you can not put ag tires on the back and turf tires on the front for example. This is because the tires are sized to roll together for the gear ratio involved.
I think it is entirely quite possible that the front tires have worn down faster than the rear tires and now as David pointed out they are not within the working limits of each other.
Here is an experiment that won’t involve any dis-assembly.
Jack up one front wheel and the same side rear wheel just enough to get ground clearance. Mark the “bottom” of each tire and with 4WD engaged, rotate the rear tire one complete revolution. I would do this by hand with the engine off and the transmission in neutral. Watch and count the revolutions of the front tire. This will give you the ratio of front to rear.
Now, measure the circumference of each tire. the ratio between the two should be really close to the gear ratio between the axles.
Do the lugs on the front and rear appear to be worn at at the same rate? It is quite common for the fronts to wear faster especially if you do a lot of tight turns on hard surfaces.
Another experiment would be to drive on some smooth sand or soft soil in 4WD and watch the tracks. More than likely the lugs on the front tires will be “pushing” the soil and leaving deformed tracks as the front tires are not rolling at the same rate as the rears. In really soft conditions, I would bet you won’t feel the binding as the fronts will be sliding instead.
You could put it in 1st/low/creeper and get off and watch as the tractor runs under power. You should be able to see the front tires “load up” and then slide forward to release the tension. Sort of “skipping” as they try to catch up to the rear tire travel.
I am not sure if I have explained these thoughts very well. Please let me know if something is confusing.
Stuart
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November 2, 2015 at 11:47 am #45567
If the tire size is correct, what about the actual TIRE PRESSURE ? Maybe its as simple as that?
Here is a old reprint post from another forum by Kelvin back in 2000 on TractoByNet on how to check for proper tire size:
When correct 4wd tractor front-rear tire size pairings are unknown or unavailable, I have come up with a simple test to determine if questionable substitute tire sizes are acceptable AFTER they are installed on the tractor. While I have an engineering degree, my statement is far from scientific or educated so please feel free to debate this issue.
Kelvin’s Questionable Test: To determine if your tractor’s 4wd gearing is compatible with the installed wheels & tires, do the following test with the tractor engine shut off and transmission in neutral (this is easiest on smaller tractors):
(1) Put the tractor in 2wd mode and see how easy the tractor is to push straight forward or backward.
(2) Put the tractor in 4wd mode and then see how easy the tractor is to push straight forward or backward.
(3) If there is resistance in 4wd mode that was not encountered in 2wd mode then the tires size may be a problem.In my specific case, the Kubota B6100/B7100 tractors call for 20.5×8.00-10 front turf tires which are no longer available (there are golf car and trailer tires available in that size, but they (1) don’t have the correct tread and (2) supposedly are not the same size as a tractor turf tire bearing the same numbers).
With my AG tires, my improvised test was successful. With turf tires mounted (correct rear tires with 20.0×8.00-10) the test failed (I had a lot of difficulty pushing the tractor in 4wd).
While comparing the B7100 to the B7100’s replacement (B7300) I noticed that all of the recommended Ag and Turf tire sizes were the same except for the front turf tires; instead of 20.5×8.00-10 the B7300 recommended a 21.0×8.00×10 which is a tire that is available. I bought a pair, mounted them and performed the above test. The tractor rolled equally easy in 2wd and 4wd mode.
So is the above mentioned simple test valid? If so, whomever reads this may want to pass the tire size information to anyone with “turf tire-equipped 4wd B6100s or B7100s” that the 21.0×8.00-10 is an acceptable substitute front turf tire.
CTOA - Founder
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November 2, 2015 at 9:44 pm #45576
I bought a stethoscope today. Will try that while I have someone sit on the tractor while moving.
The ideas about the tires is something I am anxious to try. Since there are no mechanical issues that I could find this makes a lot of sense.
I have a full set of turf and a set of ag tires. Have the Turf tires on no., I know I had this same binding problem with the ag tires since last winter while I was plowing snow.
I appreciate all of your help!!!
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November 2, 2015 at 11:02 pm #45578
I know it has been suggested before but I would make sure the front tires are the correct size. Several years we had one of 4 Jinma 254’s in the same shipment come in with smaller tires and wheels we had to swap them out with a set purchased from Northern.
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November 8, 2015 at 6:05 pm #45623
I tried everything suggested. I believe that the tires probably are the problem. There definately is a fair amount of wear on the fronts. I jacked up the left side of the tractor and in 4wd rotated the tires. The front and back did move together with no binding. I measured the circumference of the front tire and rear tire. The front tire measured 82″, the back was 127″. I marked the bottom of each tire and the concrete at the bottom center of the tires. I rotated the back tire one complete revolution (127″), the front tire rotated a total of 113″. That is one revolution (82″) plus an additional 31″ . This in itself doesn’t tell me anything since I don’t know gear ratio. I ran the tractor in 4wd on grass and blacktop and tried to look for the front tire to slide. Can’t tell like this. I have no sand or fresh dirt to check the tread pattern so I am going to wait until there is snow on the ground and try it again. I really think this is the problem, It makes the most sense to me.
Thanks for all your help
I’ll let you all know what happens.
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November 8, 2015 at 8:00 pm #45624
Ah Ha! There is your answer. That works out to a 12% difference, which is quite a lot.
When the rear tire travels 127″ the front tire must also travel 127″ or “something has to give” In your case the rear tires probably have more traction and are making the front tires slide (or hop) those other 14″ in every revolution.
The gear ratio itself is not really important until you try to figure out what circumference the front tire needs to be to match the rear tire.
Maybe someone else with turf tires can measure for comparison. I have AG tires on mine.
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November 8, 2015 at 9:38 pm #45625
If my tires hopped 14″ every revolution I think I would notice that. I think I’ll have to rethink/remeasure again, Something is definitely wrong. If I subtract the front wheel, 82″ from the rear wheel, 127″ I get a differance of 45″. If I add the 45″ to 82″ I get 127″. I think instead of leaving the tractor off the groung and measuring the travel I should leave it on the ground and push it along the ground for one revolution of the rear wheel and measure the marks. on the ground.
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November 9, 2015 at 8:43 am #45626
It doesn’t hop the 14″ all at once but rather hops a little each time it “binds up”. It also may be sliding some before it gets enough pressure built up to cause it to break loose. This is probably contributing significantly to the wear of the front tires which in turn makes the problem even worse.
There are a couple of different ways to calculate the gear ratio and tire sizes but they all boil down to exactly what you did. However far the rear tire travels, the front one must travel the same distance or something has to give. By jacking up just one side you kept the opposite tire from rotating which effectively took the differential out of play
If I remember correctly, when doing ground work (plowing, planting, cultivating) it is proper to have something like 6 to 8 percent tire slippage. This allows the soil to build up into the lugs of the tires give the best traction. The tracks left by the tires make this really obvious. That is why I had suggested finding some soft ground. Your idea of waiting for some snow or ice would do the same thing.
You may be able to duplicate the effect on dry pavement. Get lined up for a straight run on a consistent surface such as a paved driveway. Put it in 4WD and first gear, in low range and in creeper gear. Put a chalk mark on the bottom of all 4 tires, and a corresponding mark on the pavement. If you have a helper one person can drive while one watches and marks the pavement where the mark on the tire comes back around to the ground. You can do this yourself if you have to as at idle the tractor is moving slow enough to get off and back on. If you are uncomfortable with getting back on, you can at least grab the fuel cut off and stop the engine.
Having a helper is best because the person on the tractor can yell you “HOP” when he feels the tractor bind up and release. You can make a mark on the pavement when this happens. After 2 or 3 revolutions of the rear tires you will have enough “tracks” on the ground to get a visualization of what is happening.
I will try to get out and measure the circumference of my AG tires today. Then we will at least have something for comparison.
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November 9, 2015 at 7:01 pm #45628
I am very anxious to look at this again. I think you are onto something. I think I’ll try it in 4wd and then 2wd. Curious to see how much difference there is. probably won’t get to it for a day or two.
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November 9, 2015 at 8:08 pm #45629
In 2WD the front and rear wheels won’t be connected to each other and the problem should not show itself as the front wheels are free to turn at whatever rate is needed.
I measured my tires this afternoon. I have a 2006 284 with AG tires. Rear are 9.5 X 24 Front are 6.00 X 16
Circumference of Rear is 129″ and the front is 91″. One side jacked up and locked in 4WD the front tire travels 126.5″ per revolution of the rear tire. This is only a 2% difference which is probably within the allowable tolerance. The backlash of all the gears in the system probably adds up to more than that.
These are the original factory tires and have less than 20% of the tread worn off. They appear to be wearing evenly between front and rear. Also the 2% difference could probably be removed by altering the PSI in the tires. I did not check the tire pressure and only measured the one side.
It would be interesting if you could find some tires and rims from another unit to swap onto yours to see if that cures the problem.
Let us know what you find.
Stuart
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November 24, 2015 at 8:35 am #45665
Well the problem has been solved!!! It was the worn tires that caused the whole problem. I have a friend who has a simular tractor who lives 150 miles away. When he asked if he could come up to visit us I asked if he could bring his front tires so I could try them on my tractor. Guess what piper you hit the nail on the head.
Thank You Everyone for all your help!
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November 24, 2015 at 11:53 am #45668
Awesome to hear that you got your issue resolved, sure took some figuring though. I do have tires in stock if you need to order some.
Tyler Nystrom
Keno Tractors
parts@kenotractors.com
866-363-8193
Phone hours: M-F 8am to 5:30pm PST Sat 9am to 1pm PST
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