[Farmall] Clutch Decision
Al Jones
farmallsupera at earthlink.net
Thu Jul 29 17:28:39 PDT 2010
This is a very timely discussion. When I start putting the 39 A back
together, I need to decide what to do. I haven't done a real close
inspection, but the only thing I noticed when taking it apart was that the
release fingers were worn severely. Can you just replace them or had I
might as well replace the pressure plate as a unit?
Thanks,
Al
--------------------------------------------------
From: "Jim Becker" <jim.becker at verizon.net>
Sent: Thursday, July 29, 2010 6:26 PM
To: "Farmall/IHC mailing list" <farmall at lists.antique-tractor.com>
Subject: Re: [Farmall] Clutch Decision
> If you only have one spot you will probably be OK. How big is it?
> Smaller
> than the diameter of a pencil you probably would never notice. Try
> sanding
> the spot. It may disappear or at least get smaller. Other than sanding
> the
> spot, there isn't anything you can do to remove it other than replacing
> the
> pressure plate. If there are too many hard spots the clutch will probably
> want to chatter.
> Jim Becker
>
> --------------------------------------------------
> From: "Ben Wagner" <supera1948 at gmail.com>
> Sent: Thursday, July 29, 2010 3:25 PM
> To: "Farmall/IHC mailing list" <farmall at lists.antique-tractor.com>; "At"
> <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
> Subject: Re: [Farmall] Clutch Decision
>
>> On 7/29/2010 2:28 PM, Jim Becker wrote:
>>> One of the main reasons people buy the whole works is so they won't have
>>> to
>>> do it over, especially at a time when they may actually need to be using
>>> the
>>> tractor (or truck or car). If this is just a tractor you play with,
>>> some
>>> of
>>> those concerns don't apply. Besides, an A is easy to split, so doing it
>>> twice isn't that big a deal either. Inspect the parts and only replace
>>> what
>>> it really needs.
>>>
>>> Pressure plate: Clean rust off the friction surface with sand paper.
>>> Inspect for hard spots (look blue), cracks or scoring. Check the
>>> springs
>>> and levers for damage. Make sure the levers are all adjusted the same.
>>> If
>>> that all looks good, reuse it.
>>>
>>> Flywheel: Same as the friction surface of the pressure plate.
>>>
>>> Driven disk: Check the thickness of the lining. If it is mostly worn
>>> out,
>>> replace it. If not, check that it came off clean, with all friction
>>> material in place and rivets tight. If it has imbedded rust or a hard
>>> glaze, sand paper it until the glaze is uniformly broken. Do this
>>> outside
>>> with wind to your back and wear a mask so you don't breath in any dust.
>>> If
>>> it is old, it may have some asbestos in it. If it looks good at that
>>> point,
>>> reuse it.
>>>
>>> While you are in there, check the pilot bearing for wear and give it a
>>> little oil. Check the throwout bearing too.
>>> Jim Becker
>>>
>>>
>> Checked the pressure plate, and I do have one of those hard spots. What
>> do I do to correct this?
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Ben Wagner
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