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Showing content with the highest reputation on 09/11/2018 in all areas

  1. 7 points
    My local Battery Warehouse will make cables for me, any gauge, and length, any lug size. Usually around $5.00 each or less.
  2. 7 points
    Rule # 1 Hillbilly is never wrong. Rule # 2 When Hillbilly is wrong see rule # 1
  3. 5 points
    Hello everyone this is Brennan Bo, Steve Bo's son since I am 11 years old I told my dad that I wanted my own account so here I am.
  4. 5 points
    I have my reasons, cause I'm allowed to.. Will be 71 years "young" next month so.....I do whatever I like. This evening however I totally lost it. I think? Went into the corral with my doggie, and waxed (Turtle Wax) my '90 520-8 while the doggie sniffed around. This Stallion works hard! Deserves a rub down. Now I'm thinking, "Tire paint. Why not?" I have a gallon (haven't used any in a year or so ). Think I've gone too far, too far gone? Guess it's WHA (Wheel Horse Addiction). Could be worse. I guess? Goodnight Deere ().
  5. 5 points
    Hello all, Took my Mossberg 500 out and a box of slugs. Its that time of year and I added a scope to mine. Started smashing 1 ounce slugs at 1400 fps into 2 propane tanks I have out back. Man it caves in the side at a minimum and punches clear thru 50% of time. I hit both tanks and they go sailing and crash to ground. I pick em up to reset and this little guy is looking out all big eyed going WTF was that! Lmao... session over, Ill leave you alone (unless you move into one of my Kohlers!) Tony
  6. 5 points
  7. 5 points
    Have been making my own for a few years now. I buy good quality mig ground cable from princess auto, the stuff with high silicone content in the jacket. Then clean the inside of the lug with a little wire brush and flux it. Strip the cable end so about 1/16 will stick out and flux the cable too. Set up in the vise with a 5/32 drill shank and the lug and squish it down with the wire in it. Heat and solder fill till it comes to the top. Then clean with alcohol and heat shrink. I've done them without solder and never had one come loose even though it's not a true toothed crimp. Works for me
  8. 5 points
    Got the call to see if I was interested in a few signs. Couldn't get there quick enough. Plus some other parts.
  9. 5 points
    Jim you now win the prize enjoy...
  10. 4 points
    Cleaned the gas tank out. New fuel and no gas at the carb. Took fuel pump apart someone had it together wrong. Now it runs like a watch .Thanks for everyone's help !!! What a great forum.
  11. 4 points
    Welcome @Brennanbo. It's nice to see young men doing something constructive with there lives and there's nothing better then working on something that you love doing. I think holding a wrench beats holding a cell phone any day.
  12. 4 points
    Was told by the son of the original dealership owner that arrow sign was given to them from Wheel Horse when they started the dealership.
  13. 4 points
    I have the luxury of working at a place that deals with heavy electrical cables. I can purchase material from work or bring in my own materials and use their crimper to make custom fit cables. This Panduit crimper produces 6tons of pressure.
  14. 3 points
    My name is Paul and I am a WH addict.. I have a problem. I have more tractors than I have needed implements for. I do not swap implements anymore each implement has its own prime mover. So I need some new different implements. So the question what is the most useful non-common (mower deck, snow plow blower) implement that you have. i may need one like it!! (Note my wife's suggestion that I get rid of some excess tractors is a non starter.)
  15. 3 points
    Doesn't need a puller, a couple of 1/4 X 20 bolts will push it out.. Looks like this.
  16. 3 points
  17. 3 points
    Make sure the regulator is well grounded. A regulator that has a bad ground can produce over 20 VDC when the grounds connection is broken.
  18. 3 points
    My bad ...bit of American history here EB ...in 1900 Theodore Roosevelt said SPEAK softly and carry a big lunch bucket ....errr big stick! I had to it!
  19. 2 points
    Been wanting to figure out a better way to move dead tractors around - some, just isn't cooperative at being towed - the AC 916H is a great example around here. Since the rear axle is a hydro, it does not disengage fully for some reason and the tires are really shot badly. The 16Auto dug some big holes the last time I tried to move it around, so the idea here is to use the D's 3pt lift and it's size/weight advantage to move other dead tractors. I also wanted a toolbar that could have adapters added for various tasks - such as cultivators, tines, rear blade, ect. I've wanted to build a wrecker for years, just never had the time to do it - this year, I decided I've had enough of my aching back and legs - this needs to get done before I end up in the hospital. Always seems there is no help available when I need it, so now is the time - here is where I'm at as of now... All built from 1/4" thick iron, except the hub mounting plate which 1/2" thick A50 steel. Trailer hub/stub shaft is a 1750lb rated unit. In hindsight, if I ever did it again I'd use a heavier DOM tubing and just turn it to accept bearing races, make the shaft on the lathe and be done with it. Not to mention, I could control the thickness of the assembly a lot better. There are "rear tire carrier builder" parts available out there to do just that with pre-built tubing, the correct bearings and shaft - you just weld it into the square tubing of choice. Still a lot to do - need to make a set of centering springs, locking pins (for toolbar use), tire carrier arms w/tie-down rings, rear blade adapters, ect.... Just thought I'd share a bit - need to some lift testing today, hopefully. Sarge
  20. 2 points
    Thank you it is a pleasure to be here
  21. 2 points
    I’ve had good luck crimping with a heavy old set of tile nippers.
  22. 2 points
    I use my ACCEL spark plug wire crimper (vise and hammer style) on those bigger lugs, I don't use solder and so far for 30+ years nothing has failed me yet.
  23. 2 points
    Picked this up today! Been wanting one for awhile.
  24. 2 points
    The joystick, brake lever, and drive belt tension release look like a 1988 or 1989. The hood looks to be from a later 520H.
  25. 2 points
    Some of the knock off carbs i have I found the float setting to be wildly off 11/64" is correct
  26. 2 points
    Wouldn't want to be without a loader again...
  27. 2 points
    If your aim was better you could have saved setting yourself a mousetrap later....
  28. 2 points
    Heres the lower plate. Didn't turn out too bad either. Don't try this when you're tired or just waking up, make too many booboos.
  29. 2 points
    Several types of crimpers. I go to my local Mennonite auto electric shop and tell them " Make this cable with these ends but go up a size on the gauge." They mount this tool in a vise and wail on it with a big hammer. Then shrink wrap the ends.
  30. 2 points
    Now Jim @WHX20 , employee theft is not nice. Having permission to use a nice Panduit cordless crimper with 6tons of pressure is quite nice though. The cable ends are fairly cheap, the tool to crimp them is not so cheap.
  31. 2 points
    Sorry for the delay I am traveling in California. Happy Birthday my Sipping Friend.
  32. 2 points
    OK, guys, success at last! The temporary setup with the washers worked fine, I was not not completely thrilled with the solution. I feel like it is not addressing the cause, but treating a symptom. So I tried the belt that is 1” shorter. I could not get it on! So I decided to make the best of it, and machined a couple of guides to replace the washer stack. I installed them this evening, and the belt now stays on the pulley. I found in my Dad’s notes ( he bought the tractor new), the notation the main dive belt is 81 7/8” long. I guess the 5L-820 is as close as I will get. I also have no idea where Dad got those numbers... Bottom line is the tractor works as it should, and I am happy! Thanks again for everyone’s help! Danny
  33. 2 points
    I dunno if Dan @Achto willing to give up his secrets EB....... or his employer who has the stuff to have them made professionally..... hey wasn't ther a president who once said walk softly and carry a big lunch bucket?!?!?!?
  34. 2 points
    Just the nature of the Eaton 1100s. I have them in 312s,417s, and a 520 and they all act differently. Like Jeff said, the manual states they should all be warmed up before use. Some of mine require a 5-10 minute warm up before the lift will work and some lift immediately. I chained them all to a tree and they are all strong enough to dig holes.
  35. 2 points
    I have two 520H's. My 1995 starts and the lift immediately works as it should. 320 hrs on that tractor. My 1988 takes a long time for the lift to work. 1000 hrs on this one. When I start it up, I get no lift at all. In about 3-5 minutes, the lift starts working and then continues to work normally for the rest of the day. Both tractors have 10W-30 Mobil One in them and Toro oil filters. Lots of posts on this issue over the years. General consensus - it's just the way Eaton 1100's are.
  36. 2 points
    I have a sundstrand in my C160 and I use mobile1 10w30 and even in the cold of winter the response is immediate. No delay at anytime. I know the Eaton 1100 is bigger and better but it should be almost immediately able to lift and go in the summer time. I do let mine warm up some in the cold only because the manual says to.
  37. 2 points
    Late to the party but still best wishes!
  38. 1 point
    Just finished my first fab and welding project. Made a 49" mid-mount grader blade and ran it on my 520. Our driveway is about 1/2 mile long and all up hill. Had alot of wash-boarding and it cleaned it all up. What a fun piece of equipment. We may make a few to sell if we have some interest in them. Here's a link to the video of it's operation video link below http://youtu.be/ItuZiOAOElM
  39. 1 point
    Nice find. I've been intrigued by them for years. I have some places that could really use one. Congrats
  40. 1 point
    As Kurt said, that is why the confusion around the decal colours. You have an 88 or 89. When ordering parts you can use model number 31-20OE01.
  41. 1 point
    Napa sells the ends with the solder already in them.
  42. 1 point
    Friedrich Tire, Miller Tire, or ebay. Miller's are very heavy duty, maybe overkill. Friedrich seems less expensive, but not as big a selection. Ebay is hit-or-miss; lots of Chinese made tires. Jim
  43. 1 point
    Nice.Definitely something that you don't see very often.
  44. 1 point
  45. 1 point
    I wish Dougie Buffone was still alive. Bears post game show would have been a classic for the ages!
  46. 1 point
    My Eaton on the 418A was painfully slow waiting for the lift to work. Changed to Synthetic Mobil 1 10w-30 no material improvement. She was taken off winter snow blowing duty because it took so long to pick up the snowblower to move her outside to warm up and not fill the shop with exhaust fumes. Has plenty of power and is a bit faster in the summer to pick up the mower deck but i can drive outside deck down so it isn't an issue. Use Sunstrands for winter plowing and blowing...Lift works immediately year round....
  47. 1 point
  48. 1 point
  49. 1 point
    If you want to make it safer, use a starting relay mounted on the frame inside the dash stand to keep it hidden and protected, then the lighter duty key switch can handle the job versus having to use the heavier gauge wiring in that dash. The models in the 60's that used the starter-gen systems with the key switch handling the heavy current were a bit of a dicey move - especially right behind the fuel tank on those models. Using a Ford type or heavy-duty lawn mower relay would take that high amperage wiring out of the dash, not to mention be a lot safer. Sarge
  50. 1 point
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