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Implement Alley Discussion Forum

Rhino SE-6 Rotary Cutter

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Billy NY

12-07-2004 06:16:47




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Has anyone ever removed the pan on one of these older SE-6's ? ( S/N 102298 ) This what the shoulder bolts attach the blade to, it appears that after you remove the castle nut on the shaft, that a machined indent on the shaft end is there for a puller and is the only way to remove the pan. So is using a puller the correct way to remove the pan ? Also if so, what did you do to press it back on. I noticed that 1 or 2 gear box housing bolts are loose, and you must pull the pan to get to them and tighten. Also have a vibration, assuming the blades are out of balance. These Rhino's are seemingly heavy duty, worth maintaining etc.

I have gone to the Rhino-Servis website and discovered it has been updated, contains the .pdf files for operation and parts on the newer models which I assume have not changed too much in this area, had some trouble getting the large 90 page file to open, probably have to update Adobe reader again, and or I'm sure it's time to add more memory on my end, using a 56K modem has it's moments,it is a large file. This is great for the newer models, information is at your disposal in .pdf to print right out. A lot of Mfr's have done this, which is great. I sent a detailed e-mail directly to their service dept.with the same question about the assembly and got no response,this was the second time they ignored the request, understanding that people are busy and an older unit is not of much interest and also that you have to go through a dealer, most of which were not of any help, they don't even recognize the serial number, this is probably an 80's product, but has a legible S/N tag on it.

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galen

12-07-2004 20:58:10




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 Re: Rhino SE-6 Rotary Cutter in reply to Billy NY, 12-07-2004 06:16:47  
Usually cutters have a tapered shaft so you don't have to pull it far before it will fall. When installing it you use the bolt to pull it on. Clean your shaft good befor reinstalling it. and torque it good to hold may have cotterpin hole in shaft besure to replace if does. Check blades maybe vibration which caused bolts to loosen.



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Billy NY

12-08-2004 05:07:07




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 Re: Rhino SE-6 Rotary Cutter in reply to galen, 12-07-2004 20:58:10  
Thanks, sounds like a puller will do the trick, and the castle nut will press it back on, have to keep it level while doing so. They require 350 ft. lbs. of torque on the blade bolts, these have an inspection hole on top to access the bolt heads, but if the nut slips you need to have a wrench or socket on both, which is a pain, and only possible if you have the unit on its side or bottom up, so I'm way short on getting to that 350 lbs. which is mighty tight, they do have nylon locknuts, left hand thread, so maybe they will hold after a certain amount of torque and I can finish tightening them from the top, that is a lot of torque, sticker calling for 350 lbs is still on the deck.

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