SpoiledSpud
Member
- 42
- 6
- 8
- Location
- Northern (ID/WI)
I purchased my SEE last November. It was not running, the starter removed and the seller disclosed that the issue was the ring gear was damaged. This unit was through the friend of a friend and the price was right. Unfortunately winter came in on schedule and the SEE would have to sit under 10ft of snow until May. Over the winter the starter was rebuilt and several other miscellaneous parts were purchased.
The initial look at the ring gear. Another member had a similar issue and was able to clean up the teeth through this hole. Removing the driver seat made access easier and a Dremel with a carbide bit removed damaged material effectively.
I'd clean up a range of teeth that were visible through the "window" then move the vehicle a bit while in 4th gear to get to a new section of the gear to work on. This process worked well until The Ugly came into view.
Bet that made a few people cringe, I sure did. Looks like 90% of each tooth is missing in this section. I've had comments about possibly trying to add material to rebuild the teeth and then reshape them. I don't think that will be an option considering the amount of damage.
My long-term solution will be to tilt the cab, separate the engine and replace the flywheel. I found one with good teeth and had .005 removed. Purchased new OEM flywheel bolts and may replace the clutch disk while I'm in there if needed.
I think I'll still need to get it started before I can tilt so that I can remove the loader and get the backhoe off the FOPS. I'll also attempt Alpine's method for removing the FOPS with the backhoe itself.
Spud
The initial look at the ring gear. Another member had a similar issue and was able to clean up the teeth through this hole. Removing the driver seat made access easier and a Dremel with a carbide bit removed damaged material effectively.
I'd clean up a range of teeth that were visible through the "window" then move the vehicle a bit while in 4th gear to get to a new section of the gear to work on. This process worked well until The Ugly came into view.
Bet that made a few people cringe, I sure did. Looks like 90% of each tooth is missing in this section. I've had comments about possibly trying to add material to rebuild the teeth and then reshape them. I don't think that will be an option considering the amount of damage.
My long-term solution will be to tilt the cab, separate the engine and replace the flywheel. I found one with good teeth and had .005 removed. Purchased new OEM flywheel bolts and may replace the clutch disk while I'm in there if needed.
I think I'll still need to get it started before I can tilt so that I can remove the loader and get the backhoe off the FOPS. I'll also attempt Alpine's method for removing the FOPS with the backhoe itself.
Spud