steve in ok
Member
- Location
- central Oklahoma
Good morning, What are some of the ways you have removed the brake drums from an 850 that appear to have never been removed. I got the retaining screws out but the drum doesn't want to budge. Heat?
Doesn't Ford realize that the majority of their tractors belong to small farmers who cannot afford the ridiculous prices with speciality tool.
(quoted from post at 21:26:27 10/28/20)
My big blue and white tractor has FORD stamped and labeled in many places. Castings are stamped Fomoco. It was built in Highland Park, Michigan, USA. I think it is a FORD tractor.
It does not have any Fiat markings any was not made in Italy.
(quoted from post at 05:45:51 10/29/20)
Why did you switch the discussion from tractors to trucks? No argument on the tractors. My 4000 is 50 years old, and still was US made. Did not know exactly when they dropped the tractor division, or even where they are currently made.
(quoted from post at 12:42:43 10/30/20) Not true. Many of the "specialty tools" shown in the shop manual can be fabricated at home with a little work. My problem is that the recommended tools are priced at an extortion level. My father was in the tool business for 40 plus years and he had the same complaint with the tool manufacturers. When a company required the specialty tools, the tool makers, Snap On, MAC, Stanley, etc, etc automatically hiked the price by a factor of 5. This is first hand knowledge, not guesswork. For example, when GM came out with the ill fated diesel conversions, the shop manual required a C shaped wrench to remove the injector pump. Dad's retail price was about $90. You could take a std long wrench, heat it in a vice, and bend it to a similar shape. The std wrench was about $12.
(reply to post at 18:40:42 10/30/20)
(quoted from post at 19:35:11 10/31/20) The designers usually are highly intelligent which is why they make a design that requires a specialty tool. They require specialty tools for two reasons. The first reason is to produce designs that reduce production costs. If they can reduce unit cost by even a small amount, that adds up rapidly on a large production run. The second reason they require specialty tools is to discourage owners from working on the vehicle. Poor owner repairs lead to a large number of problems which the owners then blame on the manufacturer rather than their own incompetence. This then leads to said owners telling everyone that the vehicle is not reliable which hurts the reputation and sales of the vehicle.
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