Posted by Theman on June 04, 2010 at 13:36:12 from (65.198.133.254):
In Reply to: Re: tractor related posted by mkirsch on June 04, 2010 at 10:26:03:
While I agree with much of what you say and wouldn't tow a tractor myself, the outer brake pinion bearings and reverse countershaft are above the normal oil level. They receive lubrication from oil slung into a channel on each side of the transmission case by oil that is brought up by the lower transmission gears passed to the sliding gears. While being towed in neutral the lower gears don't turn so oil isn't fed to all the bearings. With the engine running, the transmission countershaft is spinning via the constant mesh gears allowing some oil (not quite as much as if the tractor is under its own power) to make it to all the bearings.
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Today's Featured Article - Farming Never Left My Blood - by Stan Gordon. I was born in 1947 youngest of ten of a working farm. Our farm was located in Saskatchewan near Saskatoon. We had a mixed farm consisting of grain and dairy all done with old machinery and by hand. My dad had a tractor, a Farmall A which was used mostly to run the thrashing machine, a seed drill and for plowing. I remember locals used to help each other and threshing was done from daylight to after dark, one farm to another until all farms were done.
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