Hi everyone. I’m new here but have been following the forum as a guest for a bit. A few months back a neighbor stopped by my house and offered me his mower that was sitting behind his house for a few years. I just had to get it before the next snowstorm buried it again. Five minutes later it was on the forks of my tractor and heading home.
Here’s my plans. I want to use it around the yard to pull a cart, wagon for the littles, and my post hole digger. I’d like to have fun in the snow and be able to swap the front between tires and snowmobile skis.
Get it running Rewire (it’s a total mess) Bigger tires. Re-gear for a bit more speed Cheap seat Lock up the transaxle??? Paint? Hand brake? Modify and upgrade as stuff breaks
I’m not sure where the build will take me but I figured entering it here will keep me motivated.
I’ll have a lot of questions along the way.
Approved - Apr 2, 2023 MightyRaze
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Age : 49 Join date : 2016-09-06 Points : 15675 Posts : 10987 Location : Oklahoma
Before starting it I had to replace the positive battery cable. It was too short and frayed with no connector on the end. After doing that I could get it to crank over. Not with the key but with a momentary push button that a PO installed. It definitely wasn’t up to the task because it started melting moments after pushing it.
Why won’t it start? I briefly forgot that Murray’s require the clutch pushed in and seat sat on. The wiring was a mess so that was next. I cleaned it up and re-connected wires to their original locations. Success! It started with the ignition switch so now I can remove the push start. It actually sounds very healthy.
I jumped on it and stuck it in first and it would barely move. Clutch needs some attention and so does the transmission. Belt was shot so I installed a new one. It goes into all 3 gears very hard but it may be because the clutch needs adjustment. I’m just happy it moves as of now.
Lastly I pulled the headlights and cleaned the lenses and housings. The contacts were very rusty but I got them cleaned up nicely. I usually polish the housings but they looked descent so I left them. New led bulbs were installed so I can add lights elsewhere without straining the stator.
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Age : 35 Join date : 2023-03-27 Points : 620 Posts : 10 Location : Green Bay, WI
This week I’ll play with the clutch and see why it’s not fully engaging the trans. Hoping that’s why the trans is shifting hard.
I’m looking for advice. It currently have a “Foote” 3 speed. 3/4” axle shafts and 8” wheels. Is it worth locking it or should I move on to a more beefy trans right away? I’m looking at rear tires but don’t want to buy some that may not work after a trans swap.
And here’s a picture that didn’t fit in the last post.
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Age : 45 Join date : 2019-07-02 Points : 4548 Posts : 2385 Location : Ontario, Canada
Hard to shift could be either the clutch not fully disengaged, too short of a belt or worn shift keys, a quick easy way to test that is by popping the belt off the trans pulley then shifting it.
I'm running a Dana/Foote/Spicer 5 speed with 5/8" input, 3/4" axles and 8" wheels on my Roper Trailblazer and so far it's been holding up pretty well (unlocked) even with the grippy 22" ATV tires. I'm not particularly easy on it but I also keep in mind I could break something if I get TOO crazy with it so I just try to be somewhat careful.
I'd suggest to just use it as is for now then as you learn decide if you want to replace it and or lock it.
Hard to shift could be either the clutch not fully disengaged, too short of a belt or worn shift keys, a quick easy way to test that is by popping the belt off the trans pulley then shifting it.
I'm running a Dana/Foote/Spicer 5 speed with 5/8" input, 3/4" axles and 8" wheels on my Roper Trailblazer and so far it's been holding up pretty well (unlocked) even with the grippy 22" ATV tires. I'm not particularly easy on it but I also keep in mind I could break something if I get TOO crazy with it so I just try to be somewhat careful.
I'd suggest to just use it as is for now then as you learn decide if you want to replace it and or lock it.
Thank you. I’m guessing it’s linkage as it was hard to shift without a belt. I purchased the Murray OEM belt for it. I definitely need to lock it or get different tires though. We have a bit of snow left and I could barely get into it.