I'm starting work on the 1955 40C I bought last fall. First item before driving it around much is that one of the upper idler rollers was frozen up.
I removed the idler, arm and all. Once I had the cap and thrust plate off, it started rolling. But it was dry and full of dirt.
Here is my conundrum. The early five-roller crawlers had a solid roller and a grease fitting at the end of the shaft in which grease could be pumped. The later five-roller crawlers had no grease fitting, but in the roller itself had an opening with a screw-in plug. You'd remove the plug, fill with 90W or 140W oil, then screw the plug back in. It appears in my case, I may have an early roller (no plug) installed on a late assembly (no grease plug).
The roller is otherwise in good shape (no flat spot), so I don't think it had been seized long.
Any recommendations on how I should move forward with this? I could potentially drill/tap an opening and make a plug, if that makes sense to do.
Keeping upper idler rollers lubricated
Re: Keeping upper idler rollers lubricated
Early idlers had a 1/8" npt fill plug, next generation, one of the cover bolt holes is driller all the way through, and you put oil in that way.
Lavoy
Lavoy
Parts and restoration for antique and late model John Deere crawlers.
Owner and moderator www.jdcrawlers.com
Owner and moderator www.jdcrawlers.com
Re: Keeping upper idler rollers lubricated
I'll look for that. Thanks!
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