Abby’s Guide > Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) > Discussions > Frozen axles
Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) Discussions |
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hirschallan
If it aint broke don't fix it !!
Location: Northern Hills of NY
Joined: Aug 25, 2005
Points: 327
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Re: Frozen axles
Reply #6 Feb 21, 2006 5:12 pm |
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hirsch
Thanks for your response. Critical question, is your garage around or slightly above freezing? I have to keep mine in a garden shed and it's basically whatever temp the outside air is--from mid-twenties to 0 F these days. I notice that when it's around freezing or above there is no problem. I have had garages before and, while it's very cold in an unheated one, it's usually a bit above freezing. Just trying to get to the bottom of this. Again, thanks for your response and hope to hear from you. hirsch--Just thought I would ask you something else: when you use your 7524, do you notice or have you noticed grease/water dripping from the ends of the wheel bolts, right around the little clasps that bolt the tires to the axle?
Bob, By the way its Allan
My garage is uninsulated and is attached at one wall meaning three walls are open to the elements without any living space above. The temp is almost what is outside and yes water does freeze. After the last snow storm I had an unusual noise coming from the propeller which turned out to be ice build up behind it.After two days it still was'nt melting so I helped along with a low temp portable heater which got the job done without any concern of over heating. As far as the dripping ,I have nothing of that .
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BobSmith
Location: Ontario Canada, snowbelt off Georgian Bay
Joined: Nov 16, 2005
Points: 30
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Re: Frozen axles
Reply #7 Feb 21, 2006 7:04 pm |
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Thanks Allan
I talked to my dealer and he said the stuck wheels problem was due to frost getting into the the friction plate area and causing it to freeze to some other part in there--not sure, some rubber part. Said that with the design of the friction drive itself there is a risk of this. Said it wasn't the axle at all so the silicone spraying down there was a waste of time. He also said that the discharge out of the ends of the wheels was grease and water and some rust running out from the grease that is used between the wheel and the axle and that using a lithium grease on the end of season servicing in this area would alleviate the dripping. Said that the inevitable water that gets in that area mixing with the grease as you're blowing causes it to drip. Next time you look at your blower see if there isn't some grayish deposit on the rims of the wheels. I'd be curious to hear. Maybe you have a different grease type that doesn't run. Oh yeah, that pancake thing behind the impeller-I get that a lot, especially if it's heavier wet snow. When I first got the machine it really built up and I got a screaming belt one time when I engaged the impeller. I now religiously run the auger after clearing for a minimum of three minutes and I haven't had the screaming/stuck impeller problem since. The factors that affect this machine the worst for me are a heavy wet clearing followed by a sharp cold snap--everything freezes hard and there is more chance to run into the stuck wheels or frozen impeller.
I think if I had known all this stuff before I would have gotten a larger Ariens or Toro. This is a basically good machine and it has surprised me with the strength of the blow, especially with a heavy snowfall, but it does have running-up-over problems, especially EOD if it's really bad. That's a weight thing though and weighing a hundred pounds less than its bigger siblings is the reason. It works well mostly but I don't have a real warm fuzzy feeling about it. I basically got the machine I could afford and store, plus-wifeability as far as handling it but you do get what you pay for. Regarding the cold-related problems if you have a semi-heated or heated garage I think a lot of these cold issues wouldn't come into play.
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