Effinay
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Dec 15, 2011
- Messages
- 103
- Location
- Pelham, NH
- Occupation
- Getting organized with my own small business
Hi All,
Continuing work on my obsolete TLB. Making some progress and I could use some suggestions at this point. Openings in the boom which enable the dipper cylinder pin to attach to "links" which operates the dipper were quite worn and peened over. This was a result of lack of maintenance to the components that maintain proper alignment of the dipper cylinder and related linkage. Long story short, with everything worn like it was the backhoe was working but it was a struggle and was only getting worse. Smarter people would have had the sense to either sell this turkey and look for something better, or scrap it and put it out of its misery, but Nooo not me, I gotta fix it! I got things disassembled (I'm good at that), removed as much of the ancient gunk that had accumulated over the years, and set to work with my little 4" grinder that I was able to squeeze in through an access plate at the bottom of the boom. A few hours later I had aching forearms and everything ground down kinda flat again. Now I can attempt to put things back the way the manual says it supposed to look like. Should I be concerned about replacing the worn sections of these "slots"? I'm thinking these openings were to allow the pin to pass through the boom and aren't as critical as the parts that maintain the right clearances for the dipper linkage. I just realized I need to resize my pics for this, I'll get them up in a bit.
Continuing work on my obsolete TLB. Making some progress and I could use some suggestions at this point. Openings in the boom which enable the dipper cylinder pin to attach to "links" which operates the dipper were quite worn and peened over. This was a result of lack of maintenance to the components that maintain proper alignment of the dipper cylinder and related linkage. Long story short, with everything worn like it was the backhoe was working but it was a struggle and was only getting worse. Smarter people would have had the sense to either sell this turkey and look for something better, or scrap it and put it out of its misery, but Nooo not me, I gotta fix it! I got things disassembled (I'm good at that), removed as much of the ancient gunk that had accumulated over the years, and set to work with my little 4" grinder that I was able to squeeze in through an access plate at the bottom of the boom. A few hours later I had aching forearms and everything ground down kinda flat again. Now I can attempt to put things back the way the manual says it supposed to look like. Should I be concerned about replacing the worn sections of these "slots"? I'm thinking these openings were to allow the pin to pass through the boom and aren't as critical as the parts that maintain the right clearances for the dipper linkage. I just realized I need to resize my pics for this, I'll get them up in a bit.