Refill Cub Cadet Transmission with no oil tap

RanchoDeluxe

Forum Newbie
Joined
May 3, 2017
Threads
1
Messages
3
Tuff-Torq Transmission Leak Repair
The oil leaked out of the hydrostatic transmission on my Cub Cadet LTX 1045 riding mower. The mower was new in 2014, and has serial number 13WX93AT###. The transmission is K461A6460-######. The axle shafts are ¾ inch and the oil seal outer diameter is 1.25 inch. Seepage from both axle oil seals eventually drained so much oil that the tractor would barely move. There was no practical cure for this because the Tuff-Torque transmission had no means to refill it. There is no drain or refill plug in the entire unit. Apparently the designers intended the initial oil fill to last the tractor’s lifetime. That’s a pipedream. The axles, both of them, are low in the oil reservoir and have solid bushing bearings near the outer ends. These are sealed with a simple standard-looking oil seal. One pressed into place, made of neoprene-like material and with a conventional spring under a sharp edged lip. That rides directly on the axle and in tractor service you can be sure it will seep, and eventually, seep a lot. There are no springs, the tractor rides rough and there’s plenty of bouncing weight to strain these axles off center and wiggle the oil seal. In addition, my tractor had small funnel-shaped plastic axle shaft covers between the outer wheel and inner transmission housing. Possibly they are to keep dirt and grass away from the oil seal area; or maybe they’re just decorative. Who knows? But the net final effect of them for me was to trap moisture at the axle shaft just outside and right up against the oil seal, itself. Result? Significant rust at the location of the oil seal on the axle shafts. These are otherwise finely machined or polished in a way that enables the oil seals to work pretty well initially. But the oxidized surface, even when smoothed by use, destroys the oil seal. There was an early recall with one seal that I know of replaced. It did not reduce the problem and both ax;es leaked slowly. In late fall 2016 this accelerated. In early spring 2017 the tractor was unusable.
Oil seals are inexpensive and available on line. Be sure to get the correct parts for your unit. There seem to have been several different hydrostatic transmissions supplied in these mowers. Replace these before the work below. Remove the wheels, the old oil seals and rust on the axle shafts. (Removing the wheels was complicated by dense white thread locker of some kind. I used an impact wrench and broke the head off of a class 5 hardened bolt. Gentle heat from a propane torch easily softens the thread locker.) Use a rust reconditioner and very fine abrasive paper…I say 800 grit or finer. The smoothed axles and new seals need to be in place to perform the final steps. The complete fix, however, is somewhat more involved than this alone.
To refill the transmission I did this: Remove it from the tractor. That means battery out, mower deck off, Fan and belt off, 5 mount bolts out, 2 control rods and one cable spring removed, and a Molex wire mount disconnected. Wheels still off.
Then place the transmission upside down in a big drain pan. It needs to be well positioned and leveled in a way that allows the work without moving off level. Remove the bottom panel from the transmission. The seal is black gasket RTV material. Clean this from the cover and the transmission without scratching or marring the surface. I found the transmission well done on the inside with sharp spur gears and well done looking parts. Substantial oil remained in the unit. I read somewhere that it is 20-50 motor oil. Refill the open transmission almost to the seal surface. (My unit took about a quart and one half altogether.) While the bottom plate is off you can drill and tap a hole in it to drain and refresh oil in the future. See the photos. There is a boss in the casting with a deep cast hole in it that appears to have been for a drain tap. I drilled and tapped this for a ¾ inch long 5/16 – 24 thread bolt. Be sure to make an oil seal gasket. Yes, this is on the bottom and very small, so using it in the future to refill the transmission will not be convenient, just somewhat easier than removing the bottom plate again. Place new sealing black gasket type RTV sealant on the clean bottom plate edge and transmission. Reassemble the plate and transmission finger tight and let cure overnight. Follow the sealer’s directions to get full curing. Tighten up, use the new hole to fully fill the transmission and reassemble the whole mower. It should then work perfectly. How long the new oil seals will work properly is an unknown roll of the dice. A month later mine is doing fine so far.
The basic transmission looked fine inside and one could probably invert it, let all the parts come out, and maybe find a suitable refill hole spot somewhere on the top. I did not want to chance this complete disassembly and the fix above does not require removal of any interior components. The drilled boss location is clear of all interior elements and is an easy modification.
Good Luck!, RanchoDeluxe
 

Attachments

  • 413edit.jpg
    413edit.jpg
    150.2 KB · Views: 171
  • 626edit.jpg
    626edit.jpg
    168 KB · Views: 148

BlazNT

Lawn Pro
Joined
Apr 26, 2012
Threads
28
Messages
6,973
Very nice write up. I have been looking at all the K46 units and looks as though Cub Cadet is one of the only ones with out an oil reservoir that attaches to top of unit. That leads me to believe it has a fill port on top somewhere on left side front.
 

motoman

Lawn Addict
Joined
Aug 11, 2011
Threads
65
Messages
2,566
Great writeup and CLEAN ! Is it possible to remove axles and seals in place, refill through gap, reinstall seals and axles?
 

RanchoDeluxe

Forum Newbie
Joined
May 3, 2017
Threads
1
Messages
3
Great writeup and CLEAN ! Is it possible to remove axles and seals in place, refill through gap, reinstall seals and axles?
--------------------------------------------------
I tried that approach first, at least in speculation. The axle bushings are installed inside the main transmission casting and would require disassembly of the unit to press them out. They are closely fitted to the axle and it would be hard to impossible to force oil past the axle-bushing to get it inside the transmission. Also, the axles are locked into the assembled transmission by large u-shaped keepers up near the differential. Removal of the axle would also require disassembly. Thanks for the comment, a sound idea but not a workable one. Rancho
 

RanchoDeluxe

Forum Newbie
Joined
May 3, 2017
Threads
1
Messages
3
Very nice write up. I have been looking at all the K46 units and looks as though Cub Cadet is one of the only ones with out an oil reservoir that attaches to top of unit. That leads me to believe it has a fill port on top somewhere on left side front.
---------------------------------------------------------
See the photo attached. Is that an openable fill port? If so then I've got a drain on the bottom now and a filler port on top! Yippee! and thanks for the info, Rancho
PS to everyone else, Just forget most of my post... Fix the seals and refill here if that's what it is.
 

Attachments

  • 20170411_190055edit (1024x768).jpg
    20170411_190055edit (1024x768).jpg
    289.5 KB · Views: 181

Pumper54

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 19, 2014
Threads
19
Messages
819
I am really liking this thread. Great right up with clear pictures and when my LX-1050 needs seals and fluid I know what and how I am going to do.
Tom
 

bertsmobile1

Lawn Royalty
Joined
Nov 29, 2014
Threads
64
Messages
24,705
---------------------------------------------------------
See the photo attached. Is that an openable fill port? If so then I've got a drain on the bottom now and a filler port on top! Yippee! and thanks for the info, Rancho
PS to everyone else, Just forget most of my post... Fix the seals and refill here if that's what it is.

YES that is the drain / fill port.
It is very easily damaged so lever it out slowly and carefully.
Tuff Torque recommends 20W-50 synthetic and it is the only place I use synthetic oil on a mower.
On an old mower I use 20W-60 deisel synthetic oil.
As a back up I fill the cavities along the axel with axel grease.
At the open end use a double lipped seal.
It will stick out a little so I put 2 or 3 washers glued together to protect it.
 

BlazNT

Lawn Pro
Joined
Apr 26, 2012
Threads
28
Messages
6,973
---------------------------------------------------------
See the photo attached. Is that an openable fill port? If so then I've got a drain on the bottom now and a filler port on top! Yippee! and thanks for the info, Rancho
PS to everyone else, Just forget most of my post... Fix the seals and refill here if that's what it is.

That is exactly where the reservoir is on all the other ones.
 
Top