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Farmall & IHC Tractors Discussion Forum
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Refurbishing ring gear teeth

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williamf

01-20-2004 10:14:09




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I've been trying to get my nerve up to tackle splitting my H to replace the ring gear. It's got the usual "worn in two spots." Now I follow a recent thread on the ATIS newsletter about this and several people write that they've had considerable success extending the life of the ring gear by reaching in through the starter hole and shaping up the worn teeth with a Dremel or similar.
Any of y'all tried this? Any thoughts? Seems a ray of hope.
Wm

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Hugh MacKay

01-20-2004 16:36:06




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 Re: Refurbishing ring gear teeth in reply to williamf, 01-20-2004 10:14:09  
William: Everyone on this thread has missed what GP said. EVERY IH RING GEAR EVER MADE ARE REVERSABLE. They are designed so when one side is worn you take it off and turn it over. I have turned about 8 or 10 of them in my lifetime, and they are good as new. I have yet to see one with a tooth completely missing. What Steven speaks of in his W9 is another matter. My Super A and 130 have both been turned. I turned these on my 300, 560D and 656D. I have also helped few other guys turn them on C, SC, H and SA.

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Hugh MacKay

01-20-2004 18:13:50




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 Re: Re: Refurbishing ring gear teeth in reply to Hugh MacKay, 01-20-2004 16:36:06  
George: You and I both know the Cub is a completely different animal from the rest of the IH family of tractors. If I have made mistake I retract that part. There are probably a few others, I guess what I probably should have said is almost all IH tractors.

This is afterall the third thread in the past two weeks on this matter of ring gears. Very few people have even suggested turning them. The one's that did have been completely ignored. I did not intend to get involved in this discussion at all. I do read a lot more on here than I take part in. It was and still is my opinion that GP's idea should be heard, and if that requires shouting, so be it.

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rebuilder

01-20-2004 19:04:24




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 Re: Re: Re: Refurbishing ring gear teeth in reply to Hugh MacKay, 01-20-2004 18:13:50  
Mr.MacKay;

I mean no disrespect, but I have to side with Mr. Wlller. I have torn apart literally hundreds of tractors(we deal exclusively with I.H./Farmalls) and I cannot recall seeing the double sided ring of which you are describing. Every ring gear that I can think of has one side beveled to match the starter bendix, while the other side is not. The only turning we do or reccomend is the turn the ring gear 180 degrees as the clock turns, not turned to the other side. I write this, not to be contrary, but to try to clarify what my mind is telling me at the moment. It is something I will be looking into.

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George Willer

01-20-2004 20:22:41




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 Re: Re: Re: Re: Refurbishing ring gear teeth in reply to rebuilder, 01-20-2004 19:04:24  
Rebuilder,

Thanks for your input. I'm sure Hugh knew better but just forgot. I don't, however, understand the shouting. I would suggest, on a four cylinder engine, to move the ring gear 90 degrees. If you study carefully, you'll find the 2 worn spots are 180 degrees apart. You really want to move unworn teeth to those spots. That should make it good for another 50 years or so.

Removing the ring gear and re-installing it is easier than most people imagine.

George Willer

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Hugh MacKay

01-21-2004 01:49:39




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 Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Refurbishing ring gear teeth in reply to George Willer, 01-20-2004 20:22:41  
George: No I'm sorry I don't know any better. In my neck of the woods, everyone turns these over. Right or wrong, that is the way it is done. I can not comment about the bevel on one side as I have never seen a new one. We didn't take new tractors apart just to see how they were built.

My 300 would have been the first one I had done. It was rebuilt by the IH dealers service shop. When out lining to dealer items I wanted fixed ring gear was one item on list. He did not turn it 90 degrees, he turned it over.

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Farmallreid

01-21-2004 11:50:27




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 Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Refurbishing ring gear tee in reply to Hugh MacKay, 01-21-2004 01:49:39  
I have to agree with Mr.MacKay on this one. I have my 450 split right now and the ring is turnable. It's gonna take some heating to get it off but it is reversable. One side is beveled on my 450 and the other is square. But if you do some thinking and some looking, the square side still fits FINE and will wear down and bevel just like the other. My thoughts.



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Roger WI

01-20-2004 19:57:07




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 Re: Re: Re: Re: Refurbishing ring gear teeth in reply to rebuilder, 01-20-2004 19:04:24  
The new ring gears they currently sell at most places do not have bevels on them any more. I was skeptical about using one of these the first time, but have not had any trouble with them as I have put them on several tractors now. I have always had trouble trying to get the old ring gear off the flywheel, so I usually just buy a new ring gear and cut the old one off rather than turning them around. Roger

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George Willer

01-20-2004 17:24:49




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 Re: Re: Refurbishing ring gear teeth in reply to Hugh MacKay, 01-20-2004 16:36:06  
I guess you haven't seen one on a Cub. The teeth are bevelled on one side and square on the other. It doesn't matter what you and GP say, that's the way they are... even if you shout.

George Willer



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bobs

01-20-2004 14:19:15




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 Re: Refurbishing ring gear teeth in reply to williamf, 01-20-2004 10:14:09  
went one step further, had a MD with bad teeth and starter would not engage to start,just wanted to get through the summer,the guy said so took a wire feed welder and put some weld on the teeth,then ground to shape with dremel.that was five years ago.long summer



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Peabody

01-20-2004 13:16:38




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 Re: Refurbishing ring gear teeth in reply to williamf, 01-20-2004 10:14:09  
You can buy an new ring gear for about $30. Splitting the tractor is really no big deal as long as you have the right equipment or improvise well.



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rustyfarmall

01-20-2004 12:58:07




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 Re: Refurbishing ring gear teeth in reply to williamf, 01-20-2004 10:14:09  
I can't imagine it would be very effective, after all, those teeth are usually not just buggered up, they are clear gone. No amount of grinding will bring them back.



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Bob M

01-20-2004 11:29:58




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 Re: Refurbishing ring gear teeth in reply to williamf, 01-20-2004 10:14:09  
Haven't tried it myself but am thinking about it.

I've got a Super H that jams the starter every so often. A new bendix on the starter helped but did not eliminate the jamming. Problem is the ring gear teeth in the two positions where the flywheel usually stops are boogered up pretty good. Instead of a nice sharp bevel on the ends of the teeth facing the starter, the ends are mushroomed and rounded over. I figure if I can get thru the starter opening with a die grinder and shape a new bevel on the ends of the teeth I may be able to avoid the agony of splitting the tractor.

I figure it's at least worth a try anyway. And if it doesn't work I'll then just go ahead and split the tractor and install a new ring gear.

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klf

01-20-2004 15:45:33




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 Re: Re: Refurbishing ring gear teeth in reply to Bob M, 01-20-2004 11:29:58  
Our H starter will stick sometimes. I just put the tractor in 5th gear and get off and rock the tractor until I hear the drive snap back in. Someday, I should look into fixing the problem.



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42FarmallH

01-20-2004 11:23:45




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 Re: Refurbishing ring gear teeth in reply to williamf, 01-20-2004 10:14:09  
third party image

Here is a pic of the ring gear on the W9 I got last fall, through the starter hole. Had sat for 20 years, mice built a nest in the bottom of the clutch housing and the teeth were rusted off. I don't think you could fix this with a dremel!

Personally, I would split the tractor and put a new ring gear on. No sense in going through all the work to flip the ring gear around or just turn it to a different spot...

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Randy in NE

01-20-2004 11:32:18




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 Re: Re: Refurbishing ring gear teeth in reply to 42FarmallH, 01-20-2004 11:23:45  
I would have to agree with 42FarmallH. Like an old tv commercial went. "You can pay me now or you can pay me later." If a person is going to go to the effort of splitting the tractor why not do it right. That would be the last time that you would ever need to replace the ring gear in our lifetime. I dremel may reshape the teeth but it is not going to build them up. Just my $0.02 worth.



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GP

01-20-2004 11:04:12




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 Re: Refurbishing ring gear teeth in reply to williamf, 01-20-2004 10:14:09  
Not 100% sure it will work on an H, but I know that on an M you can split the tractor, remove the ring gear and turn it around and put it back on. Only takes a few hours in the shop.



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big marv.

01-20-2004 15:52:17




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 Re: Re: Refurbishing ring gear teeth in reply to GP, 01-20-2004 11:04:12  
I have taken a file before and touched up the ring gear before. It worked well but soon or later you are going to either replace or turn around the ring gear. Doing nothing is going to eat up the bendix.



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Jim E.

01-20-2004 10:37:27




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 Re: Refurbishing ring gear teeth in reply to williamf, 01-20-2004 10:14:09  
Sounds to me that you are just grinding more off. If it works let me know, I may have changed a lot of them uselessly. Good luck.



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