Big Sale Has Started - UPDATED 07-31-25 (01 Apr 2025)
As some of you know my dad passed away 2 months ago today, on May 31, 2025. I posted it in the Members Only section when it happened. Thanks to all of you who have offered kind words on the forum, with phone calls, and visits in person during this time.
The Big Sale is on but not like originally planned, it is a by appointment type of thing now. I don't have the manpower, or the desire to do a big event like originally planned, I just need to sell a lot of parts that are taking up too much space here. I have been told and believe we are overloaded with Wheel Horse parts like no one has ever seen. Peeps have already been coming in from different parts of the country and buying a lot of stuff due to seeing the sale page, and seeing we are the only Wheel Horse only business in the USA that does things on the scale we do. The sale will continue for awhile until I free up some more space but you may not want to wait too long as things are being sold every day and there are limits to how many of certain parts will be sold.
As it says on the page it is still under construction and the page isn't finished yet. I've had a ton of calls for parts and the Big Sale Page may help answer some questions about what is here before peeps call. I hope that page is also clear that we DO NOT SHIP anything... This is a by appointment type of thing now. Be sure to call before you come to make sure the day isn't already full with peeps scheduled to come in, and make sure what you want is still available.
Some 314 Work
- Geno
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The one bought this week is a 1996 50th anniversary tractor. It had some very "creative" mechanic work done on it... It ran and sounded great minus a little noise from under the flywheel cover, and the switch wouldn't shut it off. The fuel bowl was leaking so I started there. I looked the carb over and thought, well this can't be good so I took it off to get a better look. You can see in the first few pics what was done. Someone broke out the bottom of the carb prob because they stripped out the bolt for the bowl trying to stop the leak. I keep new carbs around so it got a new one and the old one still had a lot of good parts on it so it got stripped down for parts. All of this over a little bowl gasket that just needed to be replaced...
Next up was the switch not shutting off the engine. I checked the switch and the switch ground was bad to the case so it was fixed with some solder to the case. The switched worked after that but it still didn't fix it. The plastic air diverter came with the tractor but was not on the coil, I was told it didn't fit. Because of this it heated up pretty quick when running it after the carb was replaced so it was time to take a look under the cover.
I pulled the flywheel cover to see why the magneto wasn't being grounded and you can see in the pic the kill wire was disconnected for some reason... The noise was someone took the coil off and didn't set the air gap so the coil frame was hitting the magnets in the flywheel as seen in the pics. The backside of the coil was sanded down and as I would find out later, it had no spark... I set the air gap to 0.014 (spec is between 0.012 and 0.016), put the cover back on and it was on to more testing.
Now everything was back to where it was before someone tried to "fix" it so I could now find the real problems. Yea, this is normal around here lol.
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- Geno
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As I said in the last post and say to peeps almost every day, as soon as I get everything back to where it was before someone tried to fix it, then I can find the real problems. Yea, this is normal around here... Of course this makes it cost a lot more than if I had it before someone else tried to fix it, but that's not because of me, or my problem. I can't help it there aren't many mechanics that know what they're doing. A carb bowl gasket, a jumper (or new seat switch) and a little solder, (or a new ignition switch) was all it really needed from the beginning.
After all of that I ran it around the property for 15 mins wide open and it's now a sweet little tractor again. Everything is good on it and works like it should, transmission is quiet and smooth, sheet metal is also all perfect with no rust at all. It's getting steam cleaned next week and parted out, I need the motor for another project scheduled to work on soon.
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I finished #2 of the 314s last week, one left to go. The 2nd one I got going was another 314-8, the one that says Stowe's on it. That one was pretty easy and done in one evening. It had some melted wires and connector supplying the battery power to the switch. I grabbed a used connector from the back and used the main power lead, then just transferred the old wiring + connectors to the used housing. It also had a wire cut in two going to the circuit board main power so it was just reconnected and all the circuit board lights worked. After that it fired right up and sounded great. It's nice no one tried to fix it before so there was no mess to redo...
I took it out like the last one and ran it around the property wide open for about 15 mins and it did fine and everything works as it should. It will also be parted out, the sheet metal is perfect with no rust at all, transmission is smooth and quiet, the seat is surprisingly nice, and like the last one I need the motor off of this one for another customer project as well. The hour meter works and it only has 206 hours on it so I guess it's not that surprising.
2 down and one to go.
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I've had a lot of Magnum heads off lately and all of them had blown head gaskets on the bottom side near the bolt with the engine puller bracket. I'm thinking this may be a common problem. Even after replacing a gasket and torquing it, then running it for 30 mins and allowing it too cool as it says in the Kohler manual that bolt tightens more than the rest. I've been running them a 2nd time and letting it cool down and the only bolt that is not to spec is still that one bolt. The 3rd run in it is still at spec and doesn't move, not sure what's up with that but I've made a note to torque all Kohler head bolts after a second cool down from now on just to be sure...
I have a lot of NOS valves but then I thought I have a big container full of valves and over 100 blocks in the other garage so I dug the correct stainless valve out of my container in the back. I also thought I should pull the intake valve and get a look at it while the front was apart. I wasn't too bad but since I had to fit the exhaust valve I might as well lap the intake valve too.
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It still has a fuel pump leak but I wanted to hear it run so it was all put back together and run around the property for 15 mins wide open like I usually do and everything is good. Everything on this tractor works and is solid like the other 2 now. It's really not normal but nice that there are 3 completely solid 314's here with no rust or dents now that everything on them works, including the circuit board lights.
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