Anyone good with tractors or know someone who is?
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Anyone good with tractors or know someone who is?
Hi. I bought an ancient Massey Ferguson to cut the grass in my horses' field. Paid a guy to cut the grass, who mistreated it somewhat and ran it dry of diesel. Now it won't start, despite the efforts of a friend who knows what he's doing.He says it needs bleeding (!?)
Does anyone have any tractor mechanic experience (long shot, I know!) or know someone who does, please? I don't need the person to speak English; fluent French, smattering of German, even!
Many thanks in advance for any help you can give
Does anyone have any tractor mechanic experience (long shot, I know!) or know someone who does, please? I don't need the person to speak English; fluent French, smattering of German, even!
Many thanks in advance for any help you can give
- Lostweekend
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Thank you so much for the offer but I'm not sure I would be capable of doing it: I'm really not mechanically-minded at all. I found something on Youtube, showing how to do it but on a much more recent model. They said it took 2 people, one to crank the engine and the other to work their way down the various 'bits', unscrewing to let the air out and rescrewing after.
I'm going to try and find someone today. If I can't, I'll come back to you.
Thank you again
I'm going to try and find someone today. If I can't, I'll come back to you.
Thank you again
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Older members will remember the TV show "The Golden Shot" ("up a bit, left a bit...."). If you don't know your way round old diesel fuel systems, trying to bleed one over the phone seems like the cue for a world of frustration. It's taken me fifty years to get the message, but sometimes it's just easier to pay a pro.Lostweekend wrote:Hi I could possibly talk you through it, if you want a chat pm your number
Steve
Though a Google search on, eg "bleed Diesel engine" will give you endless results, including instructional YouTube videos: they should be enough to put you off the idea, unless you have a good toolkit and are double-jointed.
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This may help:
http://digitalcommons.usu.edu/cgi/viewc ... ion_curall
The same thing happened to me many years ago and a passing farmer did it for me.
http://digitalcommons.usu.edu/cgi/viewc ... ion_curall
The same thing happened to me many years ago and a passing farmer did it for me.
an' the wun' cried Mary.
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You'll have guessed that I missed your post just before mine.dsd wrote:Thank you so much for the offer but I'm not sure I would be capable of doing it: I'm really not mechanically-minded at all. I found something on Youtube, showing how to do it but on a much more recent model. They said it took 2 people, one to crank the engine and the other to work their way down the various 'bits', unscrewing to let the air out and rescrewing after.
I'm going to try and find someone today. If I can't, I'll come back to you.
Thank you again
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Hi Tia,
I'm in St Genis des Fontaines. Spoke to a local agricultural worker yesterday (the one who ran it dry!) and he says he'll come with their mechanic, but no details as to when. I'll contact him again on Monday and depending on the result, I would be very grateful indeed for your husband's help.
Thank you
I'm in St Genis des Fontaines. Spoke to a local agricultural worker yesterday (the one who ran it dry!) and he says he'll come with their mechanic, but no details as to when. I'll contact him again on Monday and depending on the result, I would be very grateful indeed for your husband's help.
Thank you