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Cattle Boards
Trucks, Tractors & Machinery
Dry Clutch VS Wet Clutch Life Expectancy
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<blockquote data-quote="chevytaHOE5674" data-source="post: 1502868" data-attributes="member: 19817"><p>A lot depends on the operator and how it is abused.</p><p></p><p>I have a dry clutch loader tractor with 5800 hours on the original clutch. Only me or my wife operate the tractor and don't slip the clutch and try to minimize f/r shifting. Most of its loader time is in the open field gathering and loading bales. Also does all the mowing and half or more of the baling.</p><p></p><p>Have another dry clutch loader tractor with 1900 hours and it's second clutch but it gets run by everybody and their brother and gets used like a rented mule unloading and stacking all of the hay at home so lots and lots of quick f/r shifting. Only hours the tractor sees is loader time. A clutch, PP, TO bearing, pilot bearing, and resurfaced flywheel were like 600 bucks so I can't complain.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="chevytaHOE5674, post: 1502868, member: 19817"] A lot depends on the operator and how it is abused. I have a dry clutch loader tractor with 5800 hours on the original clutch. Only me or my wife operate the tractor and don't slip the clutch and try to minimize f/r shifting. Most of its loader time is in the open field gathering and loading bales. Also does all the mowing and half or more of the baling. Have another dry clutch loader tractor with 1900 hours and it's second clutch but it gets run by everybody and their brother and gets used like a rented mule unloading and stacking all of the hay at home so lots and lots of quick f/r shifting. Only hours the tractor sees is loader time. A clutch, PP, TO bearing, pilot bearing, and resurfaced flywheel were like 600 bucks so I can't complain. [/QUOTE]
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Dry Clutch VS Wet Clutch Life Expectancy
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