I have discovered that you can grease the pulley bearings as well as the sealed deck bearings that are loud, but not wobbly, using a needle fitting on a grease gun. As long as they are not rusted on the inside, it works great and I get an amazing amount more life out of them. All it cost is a few squirts of grease. Just be careful not to damage the plastic seals. In fact, I grease them about every other year and have not had one go bad since starting it about 7 or 8 years ago. I'm not saying you shouldn't have replaced them. I'm just saying that it's an option. Not all bearings can be saved.
I've been forced to bring back to life frozen bearings in the past. Even rusted and pitted bearings can be made to "work" again if they are disassemble, cleaned with petrol, greased and reassembled.
@@WindyJAMiller I grew up very poor and we had to rig a lot of things. I am a little better off nowadays but still like to save what I can. As far as bearings go, some bearings are not as crucial as others so I say run them till they fly apart on certain things. Not on things that I buy to fix and flip, of course. Lol.
@@eddiebear8370 you can take the seal off carefully and pack the bearings too, I usually try to do that, but a needle would be alright also, just a bit tedious with the ones I have.
@@M.TTT. Yes, I have taken the seals out before, especially if they need further attention, but I do prefer the needle on bearings that only need grease. I use very thin needles but have bent a few. Lol.
Glad you’re back with a new video! I love this channel. Other channels remove a part and don’t bother to clean it, which would only take a few minutes. That really triggers me for some reason lol. You already have it apart, just clean it!
Yes,, I have a brand new zero turn mower and presently no room in the garage, so it has to sit outside, but as soon as I got the mower I purchased a cover. For the winter I have to find a solution to store the mower inside. In the warm spring/summer/fall weather the cover does the job to keep the rain off the mower. The company from which I purchased the mower had this outside from some period before I bought the machine. That seems to be commonplace.
You should do more like this Daggerwin maybe even like a challenge where you have a budget of say £1000 to buy the item and repair it with out going over the budget and any profit made gets added to the budget for the next item till you reach the price of a new workshop
My grandpa had the basic Briggs and Stratton version of this mower. Didn't have the hood vents, the indicator lights on the wheel, or the Lawnflite badges, but it had the same engine. Seems that this one was just the fancy export version of the same 1992 mower. Just seeing this mower brought back memories of childhood summers spent either riding the mower with grandpa when I was small, or having grandpa watch as I mowed the yard myself. I miss that mower, it was dependable.
Hellooooooo McFlyyyyyyy ! ! The dashboard reminds me of the gauge cluster on '84-'88 Toyota Hilux and 4runners (grid pattern)..strong 80's "Back To The Future" kinda vibe to it 😇❤
Really like this style, where you give us a cost/profit breakdown at the end! I've always wondered how much you make on some of these and would love to see it in future videos.
Good job on that flip. I had a pretty good one recently as well. I had a Craftsman R1000 mower that I recently sold. It was given to me as a parts machine. The steering was out and one of the tires was off the rim, and the rim was damaged. I replaced the steering gear, tire and rim, and serviced it. My total cost was around $70, and I sold it for $500. It is so much fun flipping them when you made good money doing it. Your profit was phenomenal when considering the amount of work you had to do to this one. Mine was in near mint condition, besides the aforementioned issues. The previous owner just thought the issue was a much larger problem than it was.
So nice watching and learning from these videos. I bought a house last year that came with a ride-on mower which was not in a really good shape, but it ran. Watching your videos has given me enough insight in what to do for various problems, and I've managed to get it a bit better. Not replaced any parts yet though, but I suspect it needs new blades as it cuts quite uneven. Also had the joy of finding out what happens if an engine is overfilled with oil. (The dipstick was impossible to read, seemed to be almost empty when it actually was about 50% overfilled)
I have a Troy Bilt mower with a balky spindle bearing that needs to be replaced, and I am debating whether to do it or not. This machine was given to me several years ago in non running condition. It is a very low hours machine, but was stored outdoors most of it's life and doesn't look great cosmetically. It runs great though. I need to just stop procrastinating and do it. The bearing is not loud, but it is causing a delay when you engage the PTO. It takes about a second before the blades start turning, and another second or so for them to get up to speed. It gets better temporarily if I hit it with some penetrating oil, so that is giving me an excuse to procrastinate, lol.
I think i would like to see how many hours work listed. I'm not interested in the hourly wage, different people charge different amouts - but just to see how much of an investment in time it was. Nice clean up job and a tidy little profit too. Thanks for the upload.
Excellent video Machinery Restoration :) also super nice Lawn Mower Tractor and fix up to plus sold too ! Hopefully in future have bigger buildings work in too agree and all small engine stuff I have inside warm also installation garage to house ! Also nice profit got from selling Mower for did good 👍!
In the beginning of the video lifting up the mower, I thought you were actually using a telehandler. I was like "how does every other British man have a telehandler at their disposal, EXCEPT me?" But then I saw it was just a quadbike
You did well flipping this! Must be one of the few times you haven't had to even do a carburetor service, let alone replace the cylinder rings on a mower! My only thought though was - as much as I dislike Hammerite paint, because it is usually used by bodgers to cover up bad workmanship - I can't help feeling that in this case throwing some Hammerite silver on the upper side of the deck would have been an apppropriate low-effort / low cost way to hide the faults as well as protect it and add minor cosmetic / financial value to the finished machine.
Good Video I Would Have Cleaned The Rust OFF The Top Of The Deck And Painted It, It Would Have Looked Better & I Would Have Felt Better Knowing I Done It Properly
@@FlushCutinvestment isn’t just a term relating to monetary gains, an investment can take many different forms in this instance the cordless impact wrench can be seen as a time saving investment
I need to get my pressure washer running again. Haven't had the time to do it since we had a second F1 tornado come through southern Ohio again with in a month
Nice little project. Hard to believe that someone would take the time and effort to weld tabs on the blades. Maybe money was a big consideration. That will make someone a nice rider!
I know a neighbour like that who will literally spend hours bodging something ultimately to save pennies and usually with a poor result. Some of his plumbing attempts would even have cost him more in extra needless fittings!!
Hi, what type of engine oil did you use in the video? Is SAE30 also good in Italy where the temperature always remains above zero, or should I use a synthetic 10/30? Thank you.
May i suggest a AVAPOW 6,000 amp jump pack? I beleave amazon has it for $120 USD. I used to have the noco boost x gb45 1250a 12v jump pack but it kept overloading and i could only jump like maybe 2 cars b4 i had to charge it for 10 hours. The avapow so far for me is nice and lasts alot longer.