thanks for note. if anything there was to much oily film in there on the inside of the starter all over. i know to just use a min8imum of high temperature grease on the bushing and none on the bendix drive. there was an oil leak in behind the flywheel and i replaced the rear main seal. i also have seen the time when the diesel fuel return lines leaked and got oil on the starter. this old tractor still looks good and i keep it in the dry year round, but it has a lot of hours on it. i use to cut and bale hay for the public. every thing ran until it fell down or it rained. i've run this tractor without a starter with the hot leaads just bolted togehter and parked in on any hill i could find and get it to roll down and crank. its been turned upside down and was still running when the driver finally got to where it was. it had thorown him off going down the highway and ran through a fence and up the side of a tree and flipped over. it threw him off before it got to the tree thank goodnes. did hurt him at all. i've had to haul it home and put it in a basement and put heaters under it to get it warm enough to where it would crank. it wouldn't even pull off it was so cold. i got it wrm and let it running while it was on the trailer and hauled it 30 miles to load round bales of hay with. it was so cold that i got off of a running 1086 ih and grabbed the exhaust manifold with my bare hands, while it was running like i said. snot would freeze so you didn't have to worry about your nose running. some times a man has got to do what a man has to do. i've pulled the down row behind a mule team on 76=5 acres of river bottom corn just to get it out. i've puled corn with a cotton pick sack just to get it out too. so when i say i've been there and done that i mean it. thanks for your help.
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Today's Featured Article - Fabrication (Who Me? Make it myself?) - by Chris Pratt. First of all, what are the reasons for not fabricatin your own parts? Most judgements on what should be purchased rather than fabricated stem from: Originality - If the tractor restoration is to be 100% original, it is likely that you should spend the time and money to locate the component in the used or New-old-stock market. Since this can be extremely difficult, you may want to fabricate the item or purchase a modern replacement temporarily, but eventually, you s
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