Abby's Guide to Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more)
Username Password
Discussions Reviews More Guides
Abby’s Guide > Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) > Discussions > Chute Rotation and Deflector cables Freezing? Maybe this will work?

Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) Discussions

Search For:
goofienewfie


Ariens 1130DLE

Joined: Oct 25, 2007
Points: 107

Chute Rotation and Deflector cables Freezing? Maybe this will work?
Original Message   Nov 21, 2008 6:48 pm
Hi all;

Some of you may remember last year I had a problem with my deflector and rotation cables freezing. Well in effort to try and stop or maybe minimize that this year I have tried something new. Last year after it became frozen nothing really helped. WD40 or silicon, anti freeze, etc..  Tried everything aside from taking it all off and bringing it into the house to dry out. It was never really a huge problem as it would resolve itself after about 5 minutes of the engine running.  Deflector cable would warm from the engine and the rotation cable I think would do the same. But more so vibrations probably broke it up.  I don't recommend bending the cable to break it up as it will snap the plastic around it making it worse in the future.  Tape over that part now on mine.. lol.

The following I did now, hoping that all the water inside would have evaporated over the summer. More and likely so, but was tempted to bring it inside and hang them up for a few days. Probably be the best idea to do that and then feed some wd 40 down them.  Last year snowman didn't recommend putting anything down there as it would mess with the grease that the factory put in.  So if you haven't put anything down in it, maybe you shouldn't.  I had already done so when I read that from him.

Any case, here is what I am trying for this winter.  I am trying out the sandwich bag theory.. lol.  Basically what I have done is removed all the cables from where ever they end and put baggies over all of them and put them back in place with the back over it. Then I cable tied it on the bottom to help keep the bag on and the water from blowing up in it.  The only place I had to break the bag seal was on the deflector cable under the control area. This cable is held on by a eyelet. So it order to put the eyelet over the rod, I had to put a hole in one side of the baggie.  Once i got it on, I put plumbers putty around the hole I made in the bag.

I took some pictures to hopefully make more sense of it for you.  I know it doesn't look pretty, but if it works, I am fine with that. I may tidy it up more later, currently working on other things. This is just to give a idea and maybe others can improve on it. Hopefully it works, I will let you know.



Cheers
Goofie Newfie
This message was modified Nov 21, 2008 by goofienewfie


Cheers
Goofie Newfie
Replies: 1 - 4 of 4View as Thread
Replies: 1 - 4 of 4View as Thread
Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) Guide   •   Discussions  Reviews  
AbbysGuide.com   About Us   Terms of Use   Privacy Policy   Contact Us
Copyright 1998-2024 AbbysGuide.com. All rights reserved.