Abby’s Guide > Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) > Discussions > Ariens chute deflector freezing up and Chute rotation to loose.
Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) Discussions |
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goofienewfie
Ariens 1130DLE
Joined: Oct 25, 2007
Points: 107
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Ariens chute deflector freezing up and Chute rotation to loose.
Original Message Jan 7, 2008 12:33 pm |
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Hi All Loving my Ariens, but I believe a few things need to be tweaked. The Chute deflector is freezing up. I believe it to be the cable controlling it. There is a rubber nipple at the top of the cable where it attaches to the deflector. Is this rubber nibble supposed to be down past the plastic snap in piece on the second metal clip, or just placed over it? I have put some WD40 down inside the cable and it hasn't helped at all. Second, my chute rotation control is too loose when I first start the machine. The vibration from the engine brings it back to facing front every time. But after running for about 10 minutes it works almost perfect. Is this froze up too? When I say almost perfect it still doesn't stay all the way right even then. The cable seems a little short to me, if I pull some slack on the cable, its better then without. I did read the manual and it told me to ajust the bolts under the control section. Loose bottom nut, tighten top one. But if I do this, will it make it work good for the first 10 minutes and then make it to stiff for the rest? Cheers Goofie Newfie
Cheers Goofie Newfie
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borat
Joined: Nov 10, 2007
Points: 2692
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Re: Ariens chute deflector freezing up and Chute rotation to loose.
Reply #6 Jan 26, 2008 10:05 am |
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I'm having a problem understanding how a frozen cable will work with chute in one direction and not when it's in the opposite position. That doesn't seem to make sense to me. If it's frozen, it should be seized. It sounds to me that you have a defective cable. I had an ATV once that had a cable actuated gear shifter. Often when I'd try to shift gears, it would hang up. What made it worse was that it was an intermittent problem. The cable had an internal obstruction or burr that would cause it to hang up. I replaced the cable and the machine worked flawlessly for twenty years afterward. If I were you, I would not be allowing the issue to go unattended. I would demand a replacement cable and give them the unit that's causing the problems. If they can get it to work, tell them to keep it. In the interim, what you could do is get a balloon and fill it with a couple oz. of isopropynol or methanol. Remove the chute end of the cable from the machine and put the end into the balloon ensuring that it's far enough in to allow the fluids to enter a seam or joint. Tie it off tightly, lift the cable invert the balloon to allow contents to drain through the cable. Try to get as much as possible as far down the cable as you can. Gently squeeze the balloon to get the contents into the cable. Work the cable until it's free. Once that is accomplished, put a couple oz. of WD-40 into the balloon and repeat process. Once that is finished, clean off the end of the cable and put a little bead of silicon on the end to minimize opportunity for water to enter it. If that doesn't keep the cable working freely (regardless of weather conditions) your cable is probably defective.
This message was modified Jan 26, 2008 by borat
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