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Handy Don
2 minutes ago, 702854boy said:

Got some stuff in the mail today. Dad's thinking about taking them to work so he can put them in a lathe and polish them up a little bit.

 

ScotchBrite won’t hurt not much work to do manually, either. 

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702854boy
2 hours ago, Handy Don said:

ScotchBrite won’t hurt not much work to do manually, either. 

Got them nice and shiny with some scotch Brite, elbow grease and patience

20251028_191758.jpg

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Handy Don
13 hours ago, 702854boy said:

elbow grease and patience

Nice investment and very satisfying even though no one will see it after it’s assembled!

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702854boy
1 hour ago, Handy Don said:

Nice investment and very satisfying even though no one will see it after it’s assembled!

It helps ensure that we won't have to take it back apart because of rust or something in the tranny. It'll also help make sure the bearings and seals have a good place to ride against.

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oliver2-44
On 10/28/2025 at 2:13 PM, 702854boy said:

Would anyone happen to know how to restore a shift know so its shiny and not all dull?

If you have access to a drill press here’s how I do it. Get a 2-3” bolt that screws into the shifter ball and cut the head off.  Screw a nut on the bolt then thread the ball on. Tighten the nut against the shifter ball. Chuck the bolt in the drill press. If the ball is dull and scratched up start with 220 and paper. Work you way to finer and finer sand paper 229, 320,400,600,1000. Then I  move the ball and bolt to my hand drill. I have a cloth buffing wheel that I use white rouge on. Now just buff the ball with the drill turning on a slow speed. You can turn a faded scratched up ball into a mirror finish. 

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702854boy

Well I  got some shift knobs all shined up using some almost paper sand paper thats how fine it was and then getting a piece of 3/8 all thread and chucking it into the hand drill and used some cleaner and polish carnuba wax. The worser of the two is going back on our dump trailer

20251030_180310.jpg

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953 nut
On 10/29/2025 at 11:33 PM, oliver2-44 said:

Then I  move the ball and bolt to my hand drill. I have a cloth buffing wheel that I use white rouge on. Now just buff the ball with the drill turning on a slow speed

Great tip Jim,         :text-thankyouyellow:     I had one on a bolt against the turning buffing wheel one day and lost my concentration switching around to the direction that allowed the knob to unscrew itself,             :scared-eek:      it took off across the floor and out the door in a heartbeat.

If it was being turned by the drill motor it would have been much safer and I wouldn't have had to start all over again.

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702854boy

Just curious, with the six speed and lsd would it help to add the zinc additive such as what we do for the engines or are there more additives in gear oil that help with wear?

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ebinmaine
2 minutes ago, 702854boy said:

Just curious, with the six speed and lsd would it help to add the zinc additive such as what we do for the engines or are there more additives in gear oil that help with wear?

 

I don't add anything to our gear oils. They have their own Additive Package. 

 

The Wheelhorse transmission is VERY stout and likely won't need help.  

 

We run the least expensive gear oil available.  

 

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Handy Don
4 minutes ago, 702854boy said:

Just curious, with the six speed and lsd would it help to add the zinc additive such as what we do for the engines or are there more additives in gear oil that help with wear?

Never gave a thought to adding zinc. I’m running off-the-shelf 80W gear oil. 

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953 nut
13 hours ago, 702854boy said:

would it help to add the zinc additive

These are garden tractors, not dragsters or NASCAR race cars.  Don't guess it would hurt anything but doubt it would be all that beneficial.

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