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Newish snowblower but not sure what the cause of this is

5K views 31 replies 15 participants last post by  Nate0228 
#1 ·
First and foremost I would like to say hi to All as I am pretty new here. So My MTD snow blower is about 16 years old and still kicking fine. Bought it brand new and never did a service or even adjusted anything. I came across this used snow blower for a really good price so I jumped on it. Please dont look down on me lol as its a Snow joe but it was in mint condition and from what I understand its just a re-branded MTD. With at that being said. First thing I did was take of the belly pan after I brought her home. To see that the friction disc rubber had a couple flat spots. So I bought the new rubber. Removed the disc and took it apart. Put it back together and its gripping great. Does that mean that the cable was too loose or too tight?
 
#2 ·
If spots were rubbed flat on a rubber portion of a friction disc, that would have, in my opinion, been a cable to loose, thus allowing slippage and the ability to premature wear the rubber away.

But, It certainly may have been adjusted properly, and the previous owner just did not know how to operate the machine properly as well.

You are probably not privy to how it was operated or maintained, so can only assume what might have happened.

A friction disc should be brought into a drive plate (or visa versa) with a firm even amount of pressure, and that pressure maintained until it is released by the operator, for shifting gears, or at the end of the run or job.

Bring up the manual if you are not aware of how it should be, and that will tell you in detail on the proper adjustment for that unit.
 
#3 ·
It may simply have been driven against an immovable object (like a frozen snowbank) until forward motion stalled but without releasing the tractor drive hand lever. The friction wheel (connected to the tractor drive wheels) would stop turning but the disc (connected to engine PTO) would continue rotating and wear away a flat spot on the rubber.

If water gets on the disc then the friction wheel slips
 
#6 ·
LOL Ya I handed it over to my cousin. Its rusted pretty good. But now I am wondering if I made a mistake. This Snow Joe started first crank since I bought it two weeks ago. I go to try and start it just now and it made a loud bang like a gun almost and spark shot out the side. Followed by a small stream of smoke. I hope I am not in over my head here with this. SO now it wont start. I took the spark plug out to inspect and it looks horrible.
 

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#7 ·
@dubzino,

I never came across a friction disc with a separate rubber which you can change out, all I have seen are bonded to the steel disc itself, but that material sure looks pretty flimsy for a friction disc rubber material.
 
#17 · (Edited)
its a Snow joe but it was in mint condition and from what I understand its just a re-branded MTD.
Just for the record, it's not a re-branded MTD. ;)
MTD is generally considered to be ok, but also the lowest quality and lowest reliability of the "regular" US-made brands. Older ones are better than newer ones. If you have one that has worked fine for 16 years, keep it! :) just service it and maintain it, and it should keep going for many more years..

Snow-Joe is one of the 100% Chinese brands, no relation to MTD, and generally considered not worth buying. Many steps below MTD in terms of quality.

If you can get a Snow-Joe for free or really cheap, then meh, might be worth messing with...maybe. Don't buy one new though. ;)

Scot
 
#19 ·
@dubzino,

While I never worked on a replaceable friction disc rubber, I would imagine they look like this:

https://www.amazon.com/MTD-935-0243B-Rubber-Friction-Disk/dp/B005UAXNLI
I replaced one on an old Mastercraft (dealer said an MTD model) a few weeks ago. It looks quite substantial as the link shows. The steel wheel splits in two parts and the new tire is held by the shoulder with substantial force from several bolts. The old one was disintegrating and parts of it were in the bellypan.

A good and cheap to repair feature, better than the alternatives.
 
#26 ·
@ST1100A,

I am aware of some machines that have a separate rubber ring that can be replaced. I was just stating that I personally never came across one in all my repairs.

It is just that all the replacement rubber ring inserts for the friction discs that I have seen are of the same material that a normal bonded friction disc would be, that black almost tire like rubber material. I have never seen any in that clear material, which to me looks pretty flimsy. If it was me, I would be replacing that with one of the black material ones, as they appear to be a hardier material.

JMHO
 
#27 ·
@ST1100A,

I am aware of some machines that have a separate rubber ring that can be replaced. I was just stating that I personally never came across one in all my repairs.

It is just that all the replacement rubber ring inserts for the friction discs that I have seen are
of the same material that a normal bonded friction disc would be, that black almost tire like rubber material. I have never seen any in that clear material, which to me looks pretty flimsy. If it was me, I would be replacing that with one of the black material ones, as they appear to be a hardier material.

JMHO

Believe it or not the clear wheel was actually just as hard and the black one. Maybe even harder
 
#30 ·
@TooTall999,

I like the looks and quality of the DR Brand, and that brand has been around a long time. Just about every manufacturer uses China in todays economy.

sscotsman does not like China products, as he has stated many times, which is his personal right to air those feelings. I , as well as others, have other feelings on the matter, so I would not read to much into a persons feelings, as we all have our own feelings on many things.

Some people will only by product A, and others only product B … etc., etc … I myself am open to any product, regardless of where it comes from, which in todays world, could come from anywhere.

Although we can all agree on many things, we can all agree to dis-agree on many things as well.

What works for one may not necessarily work for all …..
 
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