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7045 PTO Trouble

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Tbone95 View Drop Down
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    Posted: 06 Sep 2016 at 6:31am
Hey All,

PTO does not stay engaged. Dad has been operating the tractor for the most part, chopping. I had suggested to check the oil and sent a jug to the field. He "topped off" the oil under the seat, and actually now that is somewhat over full. I didn't he did that, and didn't know it was still a problem until the following day, and checked the sight glass oil levels. It was low, probably 6-8 quarts low.

It still didn't help.

Power steering is working, however the steering cylinder is leaking. Not horrible, but a steady drizzle when moving the wheel. About 1/4 of an old dog pee stream.

PTO seems to transmit power OK, I think, wouldn't swear to it.

What am I looking at? And what have we hurt by running it this way (holding the lever forward)?
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Lynn Marshall Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 06 Sep 2016 at 7:17am
Sounds like your standby pressure is low. If that is the case, you shouldn't have any high pressure to operate the remotes or three point.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Tbone95 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 06 Sep 2016 at 7:55am
Lynn, maybe, there is a hydraulic cylinder on the head of the chopper. It will raise/lower, but it ain't much of a load.

When it began, if you actuated the header hydraulics, that was likely to disengage the PTO. How/where do I check this?
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DrAllis Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 06 Sep 2016 at 11:53am
On the side of the PTO valve, there is a TEE. On the back end of the TEE is a cap/plug. Remove the cap/plug and connect a 3,000 psi gauge. With engine running throttled up, the PTO needs to be 350 psi or more. I always adjust to as close to 600 psi as I can get. Too low of this stand-by pressure can cause the lever to drop out of gear. Tie it in with a wire for a stop-gap fix.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Dans 7080 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 06 Sep 2016 at 11:58am
Engaging the diff-lock will kick the PTO out if your not holding the lever.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Tbone95 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 06 Sep 2016 at 12:07pm
Originally posted by DrAllis DrAllis wrote:

On the side of the PTO valve, there is a TEE. On the back end of the TEE is a cap/plug. Remove the cap/plug and connect a 3,000 psi gauge. With engine running throttled up, the PTO needs to be 350 psi or more. I always adjust to as close to 600 psi as I can get. Too low of this stand-by pressure can cause the lever to drop out of gear. Tie it in with a wire for a stop-gap fix.


Thanks Doc. What fittings will I need, as I'll have to buy everything to set this up? Be nice to do it on the way home tonight if I can...

Sounds like we haven't hurt anything by using it like this then, that's good.

If I have low standby pressure here, how do I adjust it?

Edited by Tbone95 - 06 Sep 2016 at 12:09pm
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Tbone95 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 06 Sep 2016 at 12:09pm
Originally posted by Dans 7080 Dans 7080 wrote:

Engaging the diff-lock will kick the PTO out if your not holding the lever.


Not using diff lock at all. In the past, I've used diff lock while chopping in greasy hills or mud, and not had the PTO kick out...but that's irrelevant, not using diff lock at all this weekend.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Tcmtech Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 06 Sep 2016 at 1:31pm
Our 7050 we picked up last year had that same problem with the PTO dropping out when we got it and came with a bunge cord set up to hold the lever on all the time. 

I tried playing with the pressure regulator shims to get it up and got nothing for it so I swapped the PTO valve with the one on our 8030 that uses a mechanical locking system to keep it on.   PTO drop out has been trouble free since. 

I never did find the source of the low pressure problem.  Main hydraulics are good and everything else works fine since they got new cables so I left it at that. 

As far as hydraulic cylinder leask go if its fast enough to define as anything more than a slow drip it doesn't take very long to burn up a lot of money on fluid.   1 - 2 quarts an hour only takes one good day of running to dump a 5 gallon buckets worth of fluid out.Shocked 


Edited by Tcmtech - 06 Sep 2016 at 1:32pm
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Tbone95 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 06 Sep 2016 at 1:58pm
Originally posted by Tcmtech Tcmtech wrote:


Our 7050 we picked up last year had that same problem with the PTO dropping out when we got it and came with a bunge cord set up to hold the lever on all the time. 

I tried playing with the pressure regulator shims to get it up and got nothing for it so I swapped the PTO valve with the one on our 8030 that uses a mechanical locking system to keep it on.   PTO drop out has been trouble free since. 

I never did find the source of the low pressure problem.  Main hydraulics are good and everything else works fine since they got new cables so I left it at that. 

As far as hydraulic cylinder leask go if its fast enough to define as anything more than a slow drip it doesn't take very long to burn up a lot of money on fluid.   1 - 2 quarts an hour only takes one good day of running to dump a 5 gallon buckets worth of fluid out.Shocked 



Nice, sounds promising!

Totally hear you about the leak. The cylinder is off and being repaired. I didn't really want to run it all day like that, due to the money if nothing else, but we did. And not even a very productive day to show for it either.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Tcmtech Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 06 Sep 2016 at 2:24pm

[/QUOTE]

Nice, sounds promising!

Totally hear you about the leak. The cylinder is off and being repaired. I didn't really want to run it all day like that, due to the money if nothing else, but we did. And not even a very productive day to show for it either.[/QUOTE]

I asked about here before but got nothing definitive other than try adjusting the relief valve shims which didn't do anything, floated  around 275 - 325 PSI regardless  of what thickness of washer I put in to shim it up so that's where the valve swap came into play.   
When I have limited info and knowledge of a system I do what I can to make things work.  They may not be agreeable to some but modified to be functional without problems is better than nonfunctional with problems.  Wink

Besides now that I have become more familiar with the tractor I have come to find has been  cranked, cobbled, hacked on and modified way before we ever picked it up. The fuel pump is turned way  up and can roll coal like a super stock puller so that still need to be turned down.  I've done numerous wiring repairs and redesigns and still have some more to go yet and so on.Shocked 

Either way, If there's some other valve or regulator I need to look at I would sure like to know about it.   
I have no problem with taking things apart and fixing them the right way if there is proper information on the what and how to do it provided the factory design isn't idiotic or a waste of money to keep stock to begin with.  
One example is we've never owned a tractor with a torque limiter before but given the issues I have had with that I can see where , as a primary IH owner where an oil seep on a shaft seal doesn't cripple the whole tractors drive system, it seems like a stupid design that's getting defeated/eliminated before getting into flail mowing this fall.  Angry
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Tbone95 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 10 Sep 2016 at 4:59pm
Finally got around to working on this.  And conjuring up make-work fitting arrangement.

Anyway, standby pressure was a steady 400 psi. 

This is after the power steering cylinder leak has been fixed.  Maybe that was the culprit???

So if I have 400 psi standby pressure, if I still have problem, what am I looking at?  Is there something in the pull of the cable that can be adjusted?  Rained out now...haven't checked actual field operation since the power steering fixed. 


Edited by Tbone95 - 10 Sep 2016 at 5:01pm
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote bigal121892 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 11 Sep 2016 at 11:56am
Originally posted by Tcmtech Tcmtech wrote:



One example is we've never owned a tractor with a torque limiter before but given the issues I have had with that I can see where , as a primary IH owner where an oil seep on a shaft seal doesn't cripple the whole tractors drive system, it seems like a stupid design that's getting defeated/eliminated before getting into flail mowing this fall.  Angry
[/QUOTE]

The torque limiter is there for a reason, defeating/eliminating it will cost a lot more money in the long run, then just fixing the rear main.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Orange Blood Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 11 Sep 2016 at 12:35pm
If an IH tractor developed a leak of the front trans seal, it would also likely cripple the tractor.  You see the item called a "torque limiter" on an Allis, is the exact same thing called  a "dry foot clutch" on an IH, the only difference is on an Allis you cannot disengage the "torque limiter" because it is not a clutch, that function is done in the trans with wet clutches so a far better longer lasting design if you ask me.  Bottom line, if you put oil on the dry flywheel clutch of an IH, it will do the same thing, so is it really a stupid design now?
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DrAllis Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 11 Sep 2016 at 9:41pm
The elimination of the flywheel torque limiter feature (bolting it solid) will in time surely fail the splines inside the low range clutch housing and the tractor will quit moving. It's just a matter of when, not if. The more HP and more drawbar shock loads the tractor sees, the sooner it will fail. Been there....seen that before. Now, a double Belleville spring on the pressure plate isn't quite as bad as bolting solid. Using the shield kit is also a smart move if there's not one there already.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote tbran Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 11 Sep 2016 at 9:58pm
there is a service bulletin on the pto disengage when the diff lock is pressed, orfice somewhere in the line - will try to look it up somethime...
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Orange Blood Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 11 Sep 2016 at 10:51pm
WA-324 discusses priority valve diagnostic procedures, and other hydraulic demand issues, causing dropout of the hydraulic detent in the PTO valve.  An orifice is discussed as the resolution, at the "Tee" leading into the valve, to restrict the reverse flow of oil during the instantaneous pressure drop.  WA-472 gives part numbers for the replacement of the PTO valve, in "extreme" cases with a newer mechanical detent valve, with starter interlock, as found on the later model tractors.   (I have not seen a new enough tractor I guess, as I have not seen a mechanical detent PTO valve on a 70xx series)

I apologize I do not have the ability to scan them in at the moment, or I would provide them.


Edited by Orange Blood - 11 Sep 2016 at 10:55pm
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DrAllis Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 12 Sep 2016 at 6:12am
Short of doing all of that, remove the console tops (2) and bend the PTO lever towards the seat just a bit. The goal here is to provide friction against the lever keeping it from jumping out on its own. THE ORIGINAL DESIGN HERE, WAS TO SEE TO IT IF THE ENGINE WAS STALLED WITH THE PTO ENGAGED, UPON RE-START THE PTO WOULD BE DISENGAGED---SAFETY FIRST.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Tbone95 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 Sep 2016 at 6:47am
Doc, if it's still giving me fits, I'll try that bending trick. Can't wait to try to sell the tractor explaining that the bungee cord holding the PTO engaged is just fine

Just odd, it's worked fine for several years, now rather suddenly....I haven't had a chance to try it yet, due to weather and travels for work.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote tornado8070 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 Sep 2016 at 10:34am
I had similar problems a quite a few years ago with my 7020. I remember the valve spool for the pto has a nut that holds it all together. That nut had slacked back. I'm not positive but I think we replaced orings and tightened it back up and was as good as new.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Tcmtech Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 Sep 2016 at 12:48pm
Originally posted by Orange Blood Orange Blood wrote:

If an IH tractor developed a leak of the front trans seal, it would also likely cripple the tractor.  You see the item called a "torque limiter" on an Allis, is the exact same thing called  a "dry foot clutch" on an IH, the only difference is on an Allis you cannot disengage the "torque limiter" because it is not a clutch, that function is done in the trans with wet clutches so a far better longer lasting design if you ask me.  Bottom line, if you put oil on the dry flywheel clutch of an IH, it will do the same thing, so is it really a stupid design now?

All of our machines are older and have  no such torque limiters.  go until they stall is what we have and we like it that way. Tongue

I would be interested in keeping the thing working as stock but for what we use the tractor for it's just not something I can see as being justified.   The only moderately high load implement we have is the flail mower and that has its own clutch set that bonehead easy to work on.  

We don't do heavy tillage and never will so that rules out a lot of hard driveline shock loading issues there. an as I said the PTO work is already either real light or clutch protected in itself. 

As for bolting it solid it wouldn't be drilled and tapped right through the clutch plate but just cranked down to the point where it can be soaking wet with oil and not slip until the engine is maxed out.   The only way I want it to possibly slip is if I dump the clutch at full throttle in 4th or 5th gear high range.  

Does that make sense?  
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Tcmtech Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 Sep 2016 at 12:52pm
Originally posted by DrAllis DrAllis wrote:

Short of doing all of that, remove the console tops (2) and bend the PTO lever towards the seat just a bit. The goal here is to provide friction against the lever keeping it from jumping out on its own. THE ORIGINAL DESIGN HERE, WAS TO SEE TO IT IF THE ENGINE WAS STALLED WITH THE PTO ENGAGED, UPON RE-START THE PTO WOULD BE DISENGAGED---SAFETY FIRST.

I would normally agree the safety thing but none of our other equipment has such a PTO interlock and this one got to the point of being such a nuisance to deal with it got switched with the 8030 which BTW will start just fine with the PTO engaged.   Maybe it's not suposed to but it certainly does. 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Tcmtech Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 Sep 2016 at 12:57pm
Originally posted by Tbone95 Tbone95 wrote:

Doc, if it's still giving me fits, I'll try that bending trick. Can't wait to try to sell the tractor explaining that the bungee cord holding the PTO engaged is just fine

As a seller it may not work in your favor but that's likely how we got ours cheap which worked to the buyers advantage!  Tongue

As for resale... What's that?   The next owner after us is the scrap yard and they certainly don't care if anything works or not. Wink
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DrAllis Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 Sep 2016 at 12:58pm
8000 series had a safety start switch built into the butt end of the PTO valve spool and the starter relay was wired thru it. So, the PTO still had to be "off" for the starter to engage. My lever with friction on it isn't any worse than the bungie strap holding it in....if you kill the engine, you need to disengage the PTO before restarting.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Tbone95 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 Sep 2016 at 1:06pm
For starters, I can't imagine starting a tractor knowing the PTO is on. That's some line of common sense well below "safety". I've got lot's of old tractors, where some of them I suppose you could start with the PTO on if you tried. I have done a lot of goofy things since I was 8 years old running tractors, but I have never once turned a key with a PTO engaged. My Dad would have my ass still sore at age 50.

Resale doesn't mean much to me either. I can remember precisely 1 tractor that was traded in for an upgrade in my lifetime on our farm and that was about 30 years ago. It went in for a repair, and after a while, the dealer called back with a "Well, you might consider for just a few $$$ more....." But, I think the Allis will be #2. If for no other reason than I truly want my "big" tractor to be 4wd.

The bashing of the torque limiter, I don't get. Like was said, it IS a clutch, except you can't disengage it. If it was in good condition, the tractor will lug down to extremely close to stalling, if not stalling. Anything considered "useful power" at least.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Tbone95 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 Sep 2016 at 1:09pm
Age 50, no take over of the farm operations from the family by the looks of it, .....maybe beginning to consider resale vale as a more important thing than it used to be......15 more years???
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No different than with any of our other equipment.  Stall out, shut the PTO off and restart.  I've lived with it all my life to the point is not even something I have to think about.   

When a interlock works and serves it purpose without being a constant nuisance I don't have a problem with them but if anything comes across like the safety interlocks with riding lawn mowers that cause more hassle than they prevent, shift your weight on the seat they shut down, try to back up with the deck on they shut down. that crap, it gets defeated one way or another.  

FWIW if you have a solution to the PTO issue with our 7050 and it's not some major expensive fix I have no problem with switching the PTO valves on it and the 8030 back to where they belong.  Its an easy enough job.   

Mostly it just got done because I had baling to do and fighting with the dropping out any time I hit the power director pedals or hydraulics or just doing it at random plus not being able quickly and easily disengage it due to bungee cord that kept it locked in being in the way. 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Tcmtech Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 Sep 2016 at 1:19pm
Originally posted by Tbone95 Tbone95 wrote:



The bashing of the torque limiter, I don't get. Like was said, it IS a clutch, except you can't disengage it. If it was in good condition, the tractor will lug down to extremely close to stalling, if not stalling. Anything considered "useful power" at least.

I'm not basing it more than I am just frustrated with it. From my perspective it's something new that does not work as it should and is not a simple easy fix either.  

Although I do have the capacity and equipment to split a tractor that size it's not an easy job.   Sure if the shaft seal leak that makes it slip was a major multi gallon a day loss yea it's worth it but for a seep drip that so far I have not seen to be more than a teaspoon per long running day thing (4 - 5 drops come out after shutting down and sitting all night)  it's just a time consuming nuisance fix to deal with.   Angry
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Orange Blood Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 Sep 2016 at 6:10pm
Originally posted by Tcmtech Tcmtech wrote:

Originally posted by Tbone95 Tbone95 wrote:



The bashing of the torque limiter, I don't get. Like was said, it IS a clutch, except you can't disengage it. If it was in good condition, the tractor will lug down to extremely close to stalling, if not stalling. Anything considered "useful power" at least.

I'm not basing it more than I am just frustrated with it. From my perspective it's something new that does not work as it should and is not a simple easy fix either.  

Although I do have the capacity and equipment to split a tractor that size it's not an easy job.   Sure if the shaft seal leak that makes it slip was a major multi gallon a day loss yea it's worth it but for a seep drip that so far I have not seen to be more than a teaspoon per long running day thing (4 - 5 drops come out after shutting down and sitting all night)  it's just a time consuming nuisance fix to deal with.   Angry

Here is the deal, the torque limiter is not anything new.  You mentioned in a post above that you don't have a lot of understanding of the mechanics of these tractors, so please understand we are only trying to help you out here.  The engine clutch on any truck tractor, or whatever built since the first days of the internal combustion engine, is the exact same thing Allis calls a torque limiter on the 70xx and 80xx series tractors.  It is a flywheel on the engine, with a driven clutch disc (friction material and all) and a standard pressure plate.  On every other tractor out there with a dry engine clutch and many older Allis the foot clutch pedal is connected to a clutch fork that disengages the trans from the engine.  Well on the 70xx and 80xx series, there is no clutch fork, but for all intents and purposes everything else is exactly the same.  Allis chose to put the portion that disengages the engine power from the transmission elsewhere, but that is not where you are having your problem.  The reason the oil leak is a problem, is not because it drips a few drips a day, it's over time, more drips add up, and "SOAKS" the friction material, and it looses its friction properties, EXACTLY like the clutch on any IH, or Deere, or whatever will do.  Day one an oil seep will not kill the clutch, but at some point over time the soak is great enough, then a little slip, then bam it's toast, just like any other clutch out there.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Tcmtech Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 Sep 2016 at 6:48pm
Originally posted by Orange Blood Orange Blood wrote:


Here is the deal, the torque limiter is not anything new.  You mentioned in a post above that you don't have a lot of understanding of the mechanics of these tractors, so please understand we are only trying to help you out here.  The engine clutch on any truck tractor, or whatever built since the first days of the internal combustion engine, is the exact same thing Allis calls a torque limiter on the 70xx and 80xx series tractors.  It is a flywheel on the engine, with a driven clutch disc (friction material and all) and a standard pressure plate.  On every other tractor out there with a dry engine clutch and many older Allis the foot clutch pedal is connected to a clutch fork that disengages the trans from the engine.  Well on the 70xx and 80xx series, there is no clutch fork, but for all intents and purposes everything else is exactly the same.  Allis chose to put the portion that disengages the engine power from the transmission elsewhere, but that is not where you are having your problem.  The reason the oil leak is a problem, is not because it drips a few drips a day, it's over time, more drips add up, and "SOAKS" the friction material, and it looses its friction properties, EXACTLY like the clutch on any IH, or Deere, or whatever will do.  Day one an oil seep will not kill the clutch, but at some point over time the soak is great enough, then a little slip, then bam it's toast, just like any other clutch out there.
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I follow now but to me a engine mounted primary drive clutch that can't be manually disengaged and it's only job is to slip to protect the driveline, which on every other machine I have ever encountered if the main clutch ever slips for any reason something is wrong with it, because the engine can overpower it to the point of breaking things it's either because the engine they chose is too big or the driveline is underbuilt.  It's not the clutches fault or job to prevent that.   

To me a purposely built slip clutch like this design that is as critical as you guys imply should have been built as a wet clutch system not a dry one.   

I'm trying to come to terms with it but it just seems like something John Deere would have done. LOL

But just the same thanks guys I do appreciate the feedback on this.  I didn't grow up around much AC equipment in these parts.  IH was the primary machines of my early life and we didn't pass the 100 HP mark or made after 1975 on tractors until just 5 - 6 years ago so this bigger newer stuff has been a sharp and at some days rather bewildering frustration of learning curve for me.   
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Tbone95 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 19 Sep 2016 at 7:27am
I don't have a ton of time using it since due to other issues....but the PTO seems to be working fine now. I didn't do anything except fix the power steering leak. Time will tell.
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