ford 903 post holedigger driveshaft

my old driveshaft is rotted in the middle and wont spin properly after sitting for years on the ground.
1. cheaper for me to cut the center out and weld in a new pipe or buy a new or used one and take a chance?
2. is this an easy fix for a welder these days? 3. can a local tractor garage do it? 4. what size and type metal is that shaft?
my project is in southern mo. any suggestions?
thanks
thanks.
 
Hello Bob , Take your driveshaft to a Driveshaft Shop that repairs driveshafts for cars and trucks they can weld a tube in and BALANCE IT so that it does shake and vibrate when you are using it . Thanks Tony
 
not familiar with a driveshaft shop. is it a branch of a tractor repair shop? got any links to one of these repair shops? is it in a phone book as such? got a ballpark cost for the job handy? thanks.
 
Take the input shaft diameter and shearbolt diameter to a decent equipment dealership or Ag. supply store. Complete replacement driveshafts run $125-$175 depending on what and where.
 
thanks.
anyone got a ballpark repair cost to cut out the old shaft? both ends on mine are fine. just curious because one guy thinks im made of money and wants me to just buy a new one and one guy says save yourself money and fix the old one.
my digger isnt used every day. heck, id be lucky if i use it once every 2 years.
advice?
 
(quoted from post at 11:02:45 11/06/12) thanks.
anyone got a ballpark repair cost to cut out the old shaft? both ends on mine are fine. just curious because one guy thinks im made of money and wants me to just buy a new one and one guy says save yourself money and fix the old one.
my digger isnt used every day. heck, id be lucky if i use it once every 2 years.
advice?

been a lot of years, but it cost me about $80 to have a custom shaft made out of two, re-welded,
and balanced back in my drag race days.
A auto wrecking yard did it for me. a real one, not the re-cycle yards of today.
ask your local drag racers, speed shops, and such.
They will know someone that does this work for racers that
are swapping parts/rearends,etc
final balance on a car, can be done with chalk and some hose clamps,
don't know if I would try that on a tractor implement.......
 

The only 'ballpark price' worth a deep breath is one given by someone willing and able to do the job.
Don't expect to pay less just because the machine sits idle most of the time, life doesn't often work that way.
You start paying for $75 to $100 per hour shop time, that new shaft will look pretty cheap. My shop won't let a PTO shaft leave without an intact safety shield. They aren't cheap, either.
 

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