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#1
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I have a Qualcast Suffolk Punch petrol mower (43S,Model, 17 inch cut)
Cutting the lawn the blades suddenly stopped revolving and the engine became louder. Nothing caught in the blades. Clutch adjustment seems OK,Looking at the drive chain this adjustment is as it should be but with the engine running the top pulley is not revolving so therefore it is not turning the bottom pulley to drive the blades. With the engine turned off I can turn the chain by hand and both pulleys revolve. The nut securing the pulley is tight so it seems that the shaft on which the pulley is attached has come adrift somewhere. Not being a mechanic is seems to be an expensive engine strip down job? Any views please.? Peter. |
#2
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On Sun, 22 May 2005 15:40:59 +0100, "Peter Coddington"
wrote: I have a Qualcast Suffolk Punch petrol mower (43S,Model, 17 inch cut) Cutting the lawn the blades suddenly stopped revolving and the engine became louder. Nothing caught in the blades. Clutch adjustment seems OK,Looking at the drive chain this adjustment is as it should be but with the engine running the top pulley is not revolving so therefore it is not turning the bottom pulley to drive the blades. With the engine turned off I can turn the chain by hand and both pulleys revolve. The nut securing the pulley is tight so it seems that the shaft on which the pulley is attached has come adrift somewhere. Not being a mechanic is seems to be an expensive engine strip down job? Any views please.? Peter. If I remember rightly the pulley is keyed on to the shaft on these machines. It's a semi-circular key which fits into a slot on the shaft and corresponding slot on the pulley, preventing it from turning on the shaft (or the shaft turning without the pulley). It may have sheared off - it's a fail safe in case the blades are seriously obstructed as can happen if a stone gets between the cylinder and the bottom blade. I'm not certain about this but it's probably worth removing the pulley (you'll have to stop the engine from turning as you unscrew the nut) and having a look. It shouldn't need a complete engine stripdown. Another point - is there a disengageable dog clutch between the engine and the top pulley? If so, is everything OK there? Dredging my memory again, some of the Suffolks had a centrifugal clutch which engages the drive as the engine speeds up, like on a moped. If the friction material on the clutch shoes wears out or gets contaminated with oil nothing moves! |
#3
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![]() "Jupiter" wrote in message ... On Sun, 22 May 2005 15:40:59 +0100, "Peter Coddington" wrote: I have a Qualcast Suffolk Punch petrol mower (43S,Model, 17 inch cut) Cutting the lawn the blades suddenly stopped revolving and the engine became louder. Nothing caught in the blades. Clutch adjustment seems OK,Looking at the drive chain this adjustment is as it should be but with the engine running the top pulley is not revolving so therefore it is not turning the bottom pulley to drive the blades. With the engine turned off I can turn the chain by hand and both pulleys revolve. The nut securing the pulley is tight so it seems that the shaft on which the pulley is attached has come adrift somewhere. Not being a mechanic is seems to be an expensive engine strip down job? Any views please.? Peter. If I remember rightly the pulley is keyed on to the shaft on these machines. It's a semi-circular key which fits into a slot on the shaft and corresponding slot on the pulley, preventing it from turning on the shaft (or the shaft turning without the pulley). It may have sheared off - it's a fail safe in case the blades are seriously obstructed as can happen if a stone gets between the cylinder and the bottom blade. I'm not certain about this but it's probably worth removing the pulley (you'll have to stop the engine from turning as you unscrew the nut) and having a look. (SNIP) Many thanks, looking again I find that the pulley has in fact slipped off the shaft. Now to try and get the nut off as all is turning and I need to get to gips with a solid circular thing with 2 slots in before I can remove the nut. No doubt there is some sort of tool to fit into the two slots.? Peter. |
#4
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On Mon, 23 May 2005 12:10:48 +0100, "Peter Coddington"
wrote: "Jupiter" wrote in message .. . On Sun, 22 May 2005 15:40:59 +0100, "Peter Coddington" wrote: I have a Qualcast Suffolk Punch petrol mower (43S,Model, 17 inch cut) Cutting the lawn the blades suddenly stopped revolving and the engine became louder. Nothing caught in the blades. Clutch adjustment seems OK,Looking at the drive chain this adjustment is as it should be but with the engine running the top pulley is not revolving so therefore it is not turning the bottom pulley to drive the blades. With the engine turned off I can turn the chain by hand and both pulleys revolve. The nut securing the pulley is tight so it seems that the shaft on which the pulley is attached has come adrift somewhere. Not being a mechanic is seems to be an expensive engine strip down job? Any views please.? Peter. If I remember rightly the pulley is keyed on to the shaft on these machines. It's a semi-circular key which fits into a slot on the shaft and corresponding slot on the pulley, preventing it from turning on the shaft (or the shaft turning without the pulley). It may have sheared off - it's a fail safe in case the blades are seriously obstructed as can happen if a stone gets between the cylinder and the bottom blade. I'm not certain about this but it's probably worth removing the pulley (you'll have to stop the engine from turning as you unscrew the nut) and having a look. (SNIP) Many thanks, looking again I find that the pulley has in fact slipped off the shaft. Now to try and get the nut off as all is turning and I need to get to gips with a solid circular thing with 2 slots in before I can remove the nut. No doubt there is some sort of tool to fit into the two slots.? Peter. There's probably a special Suiffolk tool, but often something can be improvised. Would a flat piece of metal, drilled to take 2 protruding bolts to engage the slots serve the purpose? |
#5
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![]() "Jupiter" wrote in message ... On Mon, 23 May 2005 12:10:48 +0100, "Peter Coddington" wrote: "Jupiter" wrote in message .. . On Sun, 22 May 2005 15:40:59 +0100, "Peter Coddington" wrote: I have a Qualcast Suffolk Punch petrol mower (43S,Model, 17 inch cut) Cutting the lawn the blades suddenly stopped revolving and the engine became louder. Nothing caught in the blades. Clutch adjustment seems OK,Looking at the drive chain this adjustment is as it should be but with the engine running the top pulley is not revolving so therefore it is not turning the bottom pulley to drive the blades. With the engine turned off I can turn the chain by hand and both pulleys revolve. The nut securing the pulley is tight so it seems that the shaft on which the pulley is attached has come adrift somewhere. Not being a mechanic is seems to be an expensive engine strip down job? Any views please.? Peter. If I remember rightly the pulley is keyed on to the shaft on these machines. It's a semi-circular key which fits into a slot on the shaft and corresponding slot on the pulley, preventing it from turning on the shaft (or the shaft turning without the pulley). It may have sheared off - it's a fail safe in case the blades are seriously obstructed as can happen if a stone gets between the cylinder and the bottom blade. I'm not certain about this but it's probably worth removing the pulley (you'll have to stop the engine from turning as you unscrew the nut) and having a look. (SNIP) Many thanks, looking again I find that the pulley has in fact slipped off the shaft. Now to try and get the nut off as all is turning and I need to get to gips with a solid circular thing with 2 slots in before I can remove the nut. No doubt there is some sort of tool to fit into the two slots.? Peter. There's probably a special Suiffolk tool, but often something can be improvised. Would a flat piece of metal, drilled to take 2 protruding bolts to engage the slots serve the purpose? The previous 'thing' I mentioned was of course a metal cap fitted onto the bolt on top of the nut to secure it. This is the one with two small slots in it where a tool would fit to turn it .. May have to improvise. |
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