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Clutch housing |
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jerbob ![]() Orange Level ![]() ![]() Joined: 07 Aug 2017 Location: Michigan Points: 961 |
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Question troops.
Successfuly adjusted clutch on my HD 16 today. Was set way too tight. Now at 28 pounds pull to engage. When I had the clutch cover off I noticed about 30 years old old black grease accumulated around toe torque converter. Do I need to clean that out or better left alone? |
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Morten.have ![]() Bronze Level ![]() ![]() Joined: 16 Oct 2017 Location: Denmark Points: 145 |
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How did you adjust the clutch? I thought it was a hydraulic unit ?
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jerbob ![]() Orange Level ![]() ![]() Joined: 07 Aug 2017 Location: Michigan Points: 961 |
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It is Morton.
There is an adjustment you can make to control the amount of force to engage the clutch. Per tke book it is not to be less than 15 pounds and not more than 30 pounds of force to engage the clutch. Mine was over 38 pounds. I adjusted it to 28 pounds. Simpler than I thought. Take off a floor plate, take off clutch cover plate, loosen a bolt and turn the adjustment ring. In my case moving ting counter clockwise 4 notches got it where I wanted to be. |
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jerbob ![]() Orange Level ![]() ![]() Joined: 07 Aug 2017 Location: Michigan Points: 961 |
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Hello everyone
Before I button up the clutch cavity and put floor plates back down, can someone familiar with a torque converter model 16 let me know if I need to or should clean off the torque converter. When in and adjusting the clutch I noticed,, couldn't help but notice, years of accumulated black grease covering everything. In the manual it says you can clean or flush the clutch, but in my case the clutch looks pretty clean. To the rear of hit however must be 2 or 3 inches of black, hard and some wet grease covering everything. Is this something that should be addressed by cleaning and if so, ,,how? Thank you. |
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Ray54 ![]() Orange Level Access ![]() Joined: 22 Nov 2009 Location: Paso Robles, Ca Points: 4723 |
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You had me thinking your asking about the outside,wash away. I always figure bare metal lets heat escape better than caked on mud and oil.
BUT then you compare it to washing the inside of the clutch compartment,so are asking about inside.
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jerbob ![]() Orange Level ![]() ![]() Joined: 07 Aug 2017 Location: Michigan Points: 961 |
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Ye I am talking about the INSIDE of the clutch compartment. At least that's what I call it. Took off the center floor plate, then the clutch access plate to adjust the clutch engagement force. Loosened the retaining bolt and turned the adjustment ring to get desired amount of pull on clutch lever.
This is where I am seeing a large amount of old tar black grease caked on the Outside of the torque converter housing. |
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Ray54 ![]() Orange Level Access ![]() Joined: 22 Nov 2009 Location: Paso Robles, Ca Points: 4723 |
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Ok on the out side a pressure washer would get you a good start. My uncle who made a living with a dozer would wash his down every so often. Fifty years ago he would fill a 300 gallon water trough and portable pump with 2 inch discharge and nozzle about 1/4 inch. Gives good volume as well as good pressure could move a lot of dirt.
He never used screens on the engine compartment,just wash it out when the belly pan filled. Started with a HD 14C the first torque converter AC,then a HD21 and finally a Fiat Allis FD 30.
Edited by Ray54 - 26 Oct 2017 at 8:45pm |
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Ian Beale ![]() Orange Level ![]() Joined: 03 Oct 2011 Location: New South Wales Points: 994 |
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Ray54
"He never used screens on the engine compartment,just wash it out. " Suggests to me that he either didn't have a dozer with the fashionable tapered top line over an unfashionable straight bottom line. As on a FA 10. Or that he didn't work in timber. Our FA 10 (with no side screens) was great for filling the sump guard and the sticks don't wash out - a known fire hazard. So I built a set following the picture in the parts book. It took a while to work out how Fiat did it - some very cunning dimensions in those. And a much more satisfactory result. A couple of FD 30's in the area (Fiat V8 engines). They have vent screens built into the top of the bonnet (hood) area - great for filling the engine V with sticks too. Edited by Ian Beale - 26 Oct 2017 at 8:33pm |
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Ray54 ![]() Orange Level Access ![]() Joined: 22 Nov 2009 Location: Paso Robles, Ca Points: 4723 |
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Ian he did have some close calls with fires in the engine compartment what prompted him to start washing them out. The real tree /brush clearing was done from after WW2 to early 1960's.I was born in the 1950's so don't have any memories until the 60's and clearing new land had ended for the most part. The only safety device on the HD 14 was a U shaped pipe from the big bumper up to 4 feet above the hood to keep limbs from coming over the hood. The big Oaks with deep roots he would dig 3 sides up to 10 feet deep,pile the dirt into a ramp and push if it was a solid tree that would not drop limbs. If he thought there where limbs that would break he put a cable u high in the tree and pull. But some of the better land to clear had shallower rooted trees and grew thicker so not as big. I don't know how he judged trees,but no stories of close calls that I ever heard off.
He did comment after the HD 21 with a ripper how much easier clearing would of been with it. But then most work was building small dams to provide water for livestock and wildlife.
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jerbob ![]() Orange Level ![]() ![]() Joined: 07 Aug 2017 Location: Michigan Points: 961 |
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Sure would love to sit on that HD30.
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jerbob ![]() Orange Level ![]() ![]() Joined: 07 Aug 2017 Location: Michigan Points: 961 |
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Ian Beale ![]() Orange Level ![]() Joined: 03 Oct 2011 Location: New South Wales Points: 994 |
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Even better with two of them moving and connected with a big chain |
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jerbob ![]() Orange Level ![]() ![]() Joined: 07 Aug 2017 Location: Michigan Points: 961 |
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Now that's just crazy Ian.
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DMiller ![]() Orange Level Access ![]() Joined: 14 Sep 2009 Location: Hermann, Mo Points: 33848 |
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DiyDave ![]() Orange Level Access ![]() ![]() Joined: 11 Sep 2009 Location: Gambrills, MD Points: 54030 |
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Sounds like a Big Job! FFWD to about 4:45, in this video, fer a surprise...
![]() [TUBE]Dx8wa7JLHbs[/TUBE]
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Ian Beale ![]() Orange Level ![]() Joined: 03 Oct 2011 Location: New South Wales Points: 994 |
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I've driven one but only on a plant shift. Not in full blown clearing. Interestingly they have similar control feelings as our FA 10 - only LARGER. That crew use a relatively short chain and wind them up - flat in second gear at maybe 50 yards wide depending on timber. Comment on trees on one of our jobs was "They're tight". The chain would hit a tight one, pull it out of the ground and throw it about ten yards. Comment also is that the FD30's have the best cooling that they've seen in that type of work. They've owned HD21's, Komatsu's and worked with Cats on the other end of the chain. Edited by Ian Beale - 28 Oct 2017 at 2:49am |
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Ray54 ![]() Orange Level Access ![]() Joined: 22 Nov 2009 Location: Paso Robles, Ca Points: 4723 |
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My uncle sold his FD30 to fellow who was mostly ripping for vineyard development had always run Cat but was having trouble keeping them cool. He liked the 30 so well he ended up looking for more of them.
Cat had made the assumption a dozer spends 1/2 its time in reverse not working and designed the cooling accordingly. In ripping and brush clearing like Ian was telling about that far from how life is.
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Ian Beale ![]() Orange Level ![]() Joined: 03 Oct 2011 Location: New South Wales Points: 994 |
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Ray
"In ripping and brush clearing like Ian was telling about that far from how life is. " Particularly on the long legs where the wind is wrong for cooling |
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