843 Gearcase Gear Damage

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Auggie

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Jan 28, 2022
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Bought an old 843 and discovered the outer bearings on the input and output shaft in one gearbox were blown and things have been rattling around for at least a little while. Finally got the gearcase off.

What do y'all think about this damage on the edges of the output gears? seems like I could get away with putting it back in, but I'd like some other opinions. These gears aren't cheap

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I respectfully offer these questions for your consideration as food for thought- (1) how long do you want the machine to last after your repair? (2) how long will it take to tear the machine back down for a similar repair when it is eventually needed? (3) does downtime create issues for you (lost revenue, customer dis-satisfaction etc.)or not?
 
I respectfully offer these questions for your consideration as food for thought- (1) how long do you want the machine to last after your repair? (2) how long will it take to tear the machine back down for a similar repair when it is eventually needed? (3) does downtime create issues for you (lost revenue, customer dis-satisfaction etc.)or not?
Thanks those are the right questions to ask. This is for personal and light-duty farm use. Mostly using as an off road 'forklift' moving sacs of grain and sometimes logs around the property. Not pushing tons of dirt but I do have some upcoming projects for it.

I'd rather not do this again... so it's sort of a question of potential failure under light-medium duty conditions and failure is just a major pita for me but I don't have customers relying on me as of now.

I know the main concern would be a broken tooth. As you can see, about 10-15% of each tooth is compromised on both pieces.

there's a used large gear on ebay for 560 which I might get, but they don't even have a current part number for that smaller input shaft. Not sure what a repair would look like
 
Thanks those are the right questions to ask. This is for personal and light-duty farm use. Mostly using as an off road 'forklift' moving sacs of grain and sometimes logs around the property. Not pushing tons of dirt but I do have some upcoming projects for it.

I'd rather not do this again... so it's sort of a question of potential failure under light-medium duty conditions and failure is just a major pita for me but I don't have customers relying on me as of now.

I know the main concern would be a broken tooth. As you can see, about 10-15% of each tooth is compromised on both pieces.

there's a used large gear on ebay for 560 which I might get, but they don't even have a current part number for that smaller input shaft. Not sure what a repair would look like
I claim zero expertise (proceed at your own risk)- but if it was my machine, I would replace both gears with "better" if not new parts or go ahead and run the two damaged gears. I do not believe you will gain much, if any tooth contact area by replacing only one gear. But the pictures may not give me a valid point from which to say. IF you decide to put the worn gears back in, a little work on the edges to remove burrs or pieces that might chip off might be worth consideration.
 
I claim zero expertise (proceed at your own risk)- but if it was my machine, I would replace both gears with "better" if not new parts or go ahead and run the two damaged gears. I do not believe you will gain much, if any tooth contact area by replacing only one gear. But the pictures may not give me a valid point from which to say. IF you decide to put the worn gears back in, a little work on the edges to remove burrs or pieces that might chip off might be worth consideration.
Yes, thanks, I found replacement gears but the guy wants $1600 for the pair which feels steep... I took them to a machinist friend and he felt pretty good about running them, but said the same as you to file off any burrs. My biggest concern is probably a piece of metal chipping off and blowing up a bearing again... Not too many great options for moving forward
 
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Yes, thanks, I found replacement gears but the guy wants $1600 for the pair which feels steep... I took them to a machinist friend and he felt pretty good about running them, but said the same as you to file off any burrs. My biggest concern is probably a piece of metal chipping off and blowing up a bearing again... Not too many great options for moving forward
You should be able to find the part number on the Bobcat Online Parts catalog. I think it's 6558271, it's NLA but you might find one on ebay.
If you do decide to reuse the gears, clean all the loose stuff with a wire wheel and burnish the rough edges down; I'd probably use a 2" roloc about 80 grit. Put a good moly grease additive in, that should help reduce spalling considerably.
If there is room, I would seriously consider putting in a good rare earth magnet, like you can get at American Science & Surplus, that should trap any powdered metal or spall frags so they can't circulate into the bearings.
 
You should be able to find the part number on the Bobcat Online Parts catalog. I think it's 6558271, it's NLA but you might find one on ebay.
If you do decide to reuse the gears, clean all the loose stuff with a wire wheel and burnish the rough edges down; I'd probably use a 2" roloc about 80 grit. Put a good moly grease additive in, that should help reduce spalling considerably.
If there is room, I would seriously consider putting in a good rare earth magnet, like you can get at American Science & Surplus, that should trap any powdered metal or spall frags so they can't circulate into the bearings.
Thanks flyerdan I will do all those things! Great advice
that's the correct part number, and there's 1 on ebay for $900. Together with the $600 large gear I'll probably take by chances by burnishing what I have, using the methods you suggested. A rare earth magnet is a good idea too.
 

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