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RE: (ET) Dozer and Lift Motor



Jeremy,

 Make sure you do NOT have the lift cable end connected directly to the
blade. That is, the cable loops through the attachment point on the blade
and feeds back to the lift arm. You will need to place a bolt through the
lift arm (the holes are drilled for this) on the tractor to attach the end
of the cable to the arm. 

You get mechanical advantage this way.

 Dwight 

Dwight L. Hazen, Indiana University, UITS 
Bloomington, In. 47408-7378 Phone 812-855-5367 hazen indiana edu
http://php.ucs.indiana.edu/~hazen/ Ham Radio wb9tlh arrl net
IP Phone 317.278.4014   Change is inevitable except from a vending machine.


-----Original Message-----
From: Jeremy Gagliardi com [mailto:Jeremy Gagliardi com] 
Sent: Monday, April 01, 2002 9:38 AM
To: Elec-Trak
Subject: (ET) Dozer and Lift Motor

I got a chance to try out my dozer blade on Saturday (I haven't had the
opportunity all winter, because of lack of snow).  I was basically
scraping the top layer of soil off of our garden, which had weeded over.

First the Lift Motor:
It seems to me the lift was very strained by raising the blade.  I heard
a clicking noise and the motor went really s-l-o-w as it lifted the
blade.  I wonder if my motor is not up to snuff or if this is normal for
the heavy Dozer blade.

Second, the Dozer blade:
It doesn't seem to have much earth-moving capability.  Basically, every
time I hit a well-rooted weed (like a dense patch of wild onions), the
whole blade would bend over 90 degrees off vertical and slide over the
clump, then whap back into place.  And, the hand clamp seems very stiff
to me.  None of the parts are rusted over, but when I pull the hand
clamp, it goes about 2mm under my tightest grip, and doesn't disengage
that little stop bolt.  Is there a way to lossen this up?

Comments?

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