Farmall Cub Forum -- Questions and answers to all of your Cub related issues.
Moderator: Team Cub
by bob in CT » Wed Jan 02, 2013 3:10 pm
clodhopper wrote:bob in CT wrote:The oil hole went away when the production line at The Torrington Company was bought out and shut down. You will have to use the bearing that is available.
Any reason why the hole was done away with, or was it just a money saving production thing? Any idea if anyone other than Harold R has taken all the measurements and tried to find a suitable cross? Longevity of the new bearing? I just dont see any info like that on this site, and if it isnt on this site, I dont think I will find it anywhere....
Timken bought and closed the factory. Some lines they moved others were scrapped and if Timken was already making the bearing without the hole and no more capacity was required, then it was a casulty of the buyout like all the people that worked there. Putting the hole in was one step in the process that probably did not add up to the bean counters if IH was the primary reason for that feature to begin with. I am sure that is all that there was to it. If IH is selling it that is what they recommend. The original design lasted 60 years in tractors with milkshake emulsion in many trannies for lubricant. I would not lost any sleep over it but I would maintain the lube inspection/change schedule per Factory recommendations.
-

bob in CT
- Cub Pro

-
- Posts: 5066
- Joined: Thu Jun 07, 2007 9:34 am
- Location: CT, Manchester
- Zip Code: 06040
- Tractors Owned: 77 Cub (red); 74 Cub; 52 Cub; 50 Cub ( post-demo)

- Circle of Safety: Y
by wfmdfm » Wed Jan 02, 2013 6:18 pm
I just recently used a method found on the Forum here for the main shaft. I had it turned down to 0.787 and use a sealed bearing SKF 6004 2RSI. The bearing was only $9 but the machine work was pricey. Wally
-
wfmdfm
- Cub Star!!

-
- Posts: 380
- Joined: Tue Jun 23, 2009 6:59 pm
- Location: Middleboro Massachusetts
- Zip Code: 02346
- Tractors Owned: .
1947 Circle Cub #1110 1947 Circle Cub #1316 1948 Cub #43915 1966 Power King 189 two way Plow 54A Blade 144 Cultivator 26 ft Welcraft 1967 Case 530ck Backhoe
by clodhopper » Wed Jan 02, 2013 7:05 pm
wfmdfm wrote:I just recently used a method found on the Forum here for the main shaft. I had it turned down to 0.787 and use a sealed bearing SKF 6004 2RSI. The bearing was only $9 but the machine work was pricey. Wally
Correct me if I'm wrong, but that method is only for the earlier style case.
The older I get, the younger I was.
-

clodhopper
- 501 Club

-
- Posts: 650
- Joined: Sat May 07, 2011 8:20 pm
- Zip Code: 27526
- Tractors Owned: 1950 Cub Demo
1978 Cub Cadet 1650 cub 193 plow cub 174 planter cub sidedresser cub 144 cultivator cadet 50a deck 60A grader blade

- Circle of Safety: Y
by wfmdfm » Wed Jan 02, 2013 7:30 pm
George Willer wrote:Tom,
I haven't done this with the later case so I don't know if it will work, but I've made a substitute (improvement) for the bearing in that location in the early case (352402R91). It requires reducing the shaft slightly by precision grinding and no change to the case to convert to ND 3L04 or SKF 6004. This eliminates the wear problem caused by the rollers running directly on the shaft.
I think you are correct.
-
wfmdfm
- Cub Star!!

-
- Posts: 380
- Joined: Tue Jun 23, 2009 6:59 pm
- Location: Middleboro Massachusetts
- Zip Code: 02346
- Tractors Owned: .
1947 Circle Cub #1110 1947 Circle Cub #1316 1948 Cub #43915 1966 Power King 189 two way Plow 54A Blade 144 Cultivator 26 ft Welcraft 1967 Case 530ck Backhoe
by Buzzard Wing » Wed Jan 02, 2013 11:03 pm
Yep, GW's post was regarding the older tranny case with a sealed bearing. I would think that if Tom at TM could find one with an oil hole, he would sell it (if up to quality standards).
I have a tranny with what TM sells (same as a dealer), but no run time on it. I agree that there should be enough oil splashing around to keep it reasonably well lubed. But an oil hole would be better.
I could barely find the lube hole for the front bearing and it's not uncommon for them to be plugged up.
1971 Cub (Rufus) 1950 Cub (Cathy) 1965 Lo Boy Fast Hitch (Nameless III) 1970 Cub 1000 Loader & Fast Hitch (Lee)
-

Buzzard Wing
- Cub Pro

-
- Posts: 9591
- Joined: Mon Aug 09, 2004 10:14 pm
- Location: RI, Newport
- Zip Code: 02840
by clodhopper » Wed Jan 02, 2013 11:11 pm
Buzzard Wing wrote:Yep, GW's post was regarding the older tranny case with a sealed bearing. I would think that if Tom at TM could find one with an oil hole, he would sell it (if up to quality standards).
I have a tranny with what TM sells (same as a dealer), but no run time on it. I agree that there should be enough oil splashing around to keep it reasonably well lubed. But an oil hole would be better.
I could barely find the lube hole for the front bearing and it's not uncommon for them to be plugged up.
My front oil hole in the case was gunked up a bit. When I pulled the input shaft and looked at the front bearing it was obvious it had been oil starved. I crossed that bearing to a timken 105CC that is double sealed. I think I will have just as much luck with it on the front as an oil starved needle bearing on the back. 
The older I get, the younger I was.
-

clodhopper
- 501 Club

-
- Posts: 650
- Joined: Sat May 07, 2011 8:20 pm
- Zip Code: 27526
- Tractors Owned: 1950 Cub Demo
1978 Cub Cadet 1650 cub 193 plow cub 174 planter cub sidedresser cub 144 cultivator cadet 50a deck 60A grader blade

- Circle of Safety: Y
by Buzzard Wing » Thu Jan 03, 2013 9:09 am
Those 'main shaft' bearings get no lube when the PTO (belt pulley) is run stationary. It relies on the gears to sling oil.
The original front bearing on my 77 was shielded on one side (to keep the oil in the bearing), the replacement is not. I thought of using a sealed bearing, but figured an open bearing is fine in the tranny. Seem to recall it's 'common' (6000 series) and should be readily available from SKF or NTN. The only downside of a rubber sealed bearing is a bit of drag. Any good bearing should be fine for the life of the tranny.
Put the o-ring in the shifter while you have it apart...... water isn't kind to bearings.
1971 Cub (Rufus) 1950 Cub (Cathy) 1965 Lo Boy Fast Hitch (Nameless III) 1970 Cub 1000 Loader & Fast Hitch (Lee)
-

Buzzard Wing
- Cub Pro

-
- Posts: 9591
- Joined: Mon Aug 09, 2004 10:14 pm
- Location: RI, Newport
- Zip Code: 02840
by wfmdfm » Thu Jan 03, 2013 2:52 pm
What is the O Ring on the shifter?
-
wfmdfm
- Cub Star!!

-
- Posts: 380
- Joined: Tue Jun 23, 2009 6:59 pm
- Location: Middleboro Massachusetts
- Zip Code: 02346
- Tractors Owned: .
1947 Circle Cub #1110 1947 Circle Cub #1316 1948 Cub #43915 1966 Power King 189 two way Plow 54A Blade 144 Cultivator 26 ft Welcraft 1967 Case 530ck Backhoe
by Bob McCarty » Thu Jan 03, 2013 4:15 pm
The o-ring goes under the bottom spring retainer :  (picture from TM Tractor) The o-ring keeps water from running down the shifter into the tranny (or at least helps in that regard). Bob
"We don't need to think more, we need to think differently." -Albert Einstein
-
Bob McCarty
- Cub Pro

-
- Posts: 4657
- Joined: Tue May 25, 2004 8:02 pm
- Location: CO, Longmont
- Zip Code: 80501

- Circle of Safety: Y
by Buzzard Wing » Thu Jan 03, 2013 7:03 pm
Yep Jim, you can tell by the 'sequence number' (highest on the page) that it was added in after the original design. It can't hurt and I am with GW on the larger size, the real purpose is only to divert water from going in the shifter/tranny case. #24, should be available from a hardware store. Odd that TM doesn't have it. http://www.farmallcub.info/tc37f_db/tc3 ... 007-10.jpg
1971 Cub (Rufus) 1950 Cub (Cathy) 1965 Lo Boy Fast Hitch (Nameless III) 1970 Cub 1000 Loader & Fast Hitch (Lee)
-

Buzzard Wing
- Cub Pro

-
- Posts: 9591
- Joined: Mon Aug 09, 2004 10:14 pm
- Location: RI, Newport
- Zip Code: 02840
by Bob McCarty » Thu Jan 03, 2013 8:24 pm
My earlier post was referring to GW's shifter rebuild, in which he made his own spring retainers that had the o-rings in them: http://www.cleancomputes.com/Cub/Mainte ... vement.htmBob
"We don't need to think more, we need to think differently." -Albert Einstein
-
Bob McCarty
- Cub Pro

-
- Posts: 4657
- Joined: Tue May 25, 2004 8:02 pm
- Location: CO, Longmont
- Zip Code: 80501

- Circle of Safety: Y
by clodhopper » Sun Jan 06, 2013 12:13 pm
Bringing this back to the top. Have one more question. I set the preload on the carrier bearings. Now I am trying to get the gear set "dialed in". I can see the factory specs are unattainable with a 62 year old gear set... but I have shimmed the carrier left to right and back. I can get it quiet in one direction but not both. Quiet in one direction is about. 012 backlash. Am I going to have to just live with this noise unless I replace the gearset? I am afraid to get too small a backlash on an old gearset, cause I dont want it to explode on me, but I havent shimmed it below. 008. I dont know if that would affect the noise or make it worse. Input?
The older I get, the younger I was.
-

clodhopper
- 501 Club

-
- Posts: 650
- Joined: Sat May 07, 2011 8:20 pm
- Zip Code: 27526
- Tractors Owned: 1950 Cub Demo
1978 Cub Cadet 1650 cub 193 plow cub 174 planter cub sidedresser cub 144 cultivator cadet 50a deck 60A grader blade

- Circle of Safety: Y
by Boss Hog » Sun Jan 06, 2013 12:27 pm
I would get the back lash out, I dont think you will have a lot of ring and pinion noise , That would come from the gears in the trans. JMO
IN GOD WE TRUST All others pay cash Boss Hog Power corrupts; absolute power corrupts absolutely byJohn Emerich Edward Dalberg
-

Boss Hog
- Cub Pro

-
- Posts: 8972
- Joined: Mon Oct 24, 2005 8:35 pm
- Location: VA. Randolph
- Zip Code: 23962
- eBay ID: dmb2613

- Circle of Safety: Y
Return to Farmall Cub
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: Bill, raystractors, Xperimental and 7 guests
|
|