mudmuckgrease
Member
Hello folks! Following Is an update to our attempts to get this Oliver OC-3 home. Added to this is a mystery concerning its transmission: There are two of them!(quoted from post at 00:53:14 05/17/23) I hope that isn't the problem with our OC-3. I really don't want to mess with that magneto out in the field. We ordered a new carburetor and intake/exhaust manifold from OliverCrawlers.com - hope to receive it soon. Yesterday, we drove out there to play with it - it starts easily and we let it warm up before putting any load on it. It runs very well until we put a load on it - that is when it starts to misfire and then it quits - not to start again. I checked the spark plugs and they are coated with black soot. Adjusting the fuel mixture on the carburetor didn't seem to help, so I'm hoping the new carb and manifold will solve this problem.
The thing is in a tight and steep location, so we will need to drive it out so that it can be loaded onto a trailer.
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This post was edited by mudmuckgrease on 05/16/2023 at 04:53 pm.
I changed out the carburetor with a new one from Yesterday s Tractors. The engine now runs well and we can now keep it running while under load. Attached is a picture of the drive that we must take to get it to a point where it can be loaded onto a trailer. The drive is a lot steeper than the picture depicts, none-the-less, it should pose no problem to a crawler. We made wooden pads that bolted onto the tracks so that no damage would be done to the read. Half way up the drive, the Oliver struggled as if it were in a high gear it couldn t make it up all the way. We were in reverse gear and we were backing up as the backhoe is very heavy. The second picture shows some of both transmissions: After the Clutch is a small what appears to be an old ford transmission then there comes what I think is a U-joint and then the main transmission/rear axle assembly. The previous owner said that he never used that fist transmission and that he recommended that we don t use it. I thought that maybe there was something wrong with it, so we left it as is. I later asked him if there was something wrong with that fist transmission and he said that he knew of nothing wrong with it it was just that he was told that it made the tractor move very slow. OK so what I think we have here is a transmission with a high/low mode, and we are apparently in a high mode while the main transmission is in first gear or in this case, reverse gear. Could this be our problem? Turning to this tractor s operation manual, I could find no mention of that first gearbox. I don t know what gear it is in, how many gears it has or what its shifting patern is. Do we have some kind of highbred here? Does anyone know about this transmission configuration and what the shift patern is in the first transmission?
Also, that Idea I had with bolting wooden plates onto the tracks turns out to be not a very good idea as the tractor will tear that wood apart in short order. Hopefully, it will last long enough to get us on a trailer that is, if we can just get the thing out of that depression that it is in.