Monthly Archive for February, 2010

China Syndrome

We have a fleet of Club Car CarryAll vehicles. They’ve been remarkable over the years. This is my second fleet, the first one lasted 12 years. With this group I seem to be adjusting brakes more but the starters have been holding up better. Although now, at 6 years, I’ve been hearing some really horrible noises from several. Going through the steps it turns out to be starter/generator bearings. So now I’m going through a few of those and since I just put my last new starter on, I ordered one for stock along with bearing sets for a few others.

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WOW… Not what I expected. The usual starter is made in Korea and just about a work of art. The new one came from China and still has the sanding marks on the castings. It is bi-directional which means you no longer need one for CarryAll 1′s and another for 2′s.. and at first I thought, They’re really building these inexpensively :) DSCN1964

Thinking about it later in the day though, this isn’t about China. It’s about companies spec’ing out components and picking the one that’s “just good enough”. For Club Car, this is a real decline in appearance quality. Whether the internals hold up as well as the previous version remains to be seen.

  

Getting ready for Green Care

IMG_0451Our NEW Jacobsen Synthetic Hydraulic Fluid arrived. Right now I have our oldest triplex in for a fluid change, filter, new hoses and lift arm pins and bushings. That’s an awful lot to be putting into a 12 year old machine with 6800 hrs on it but I don’t see many new machines coming in anytime soon. The way the budget is, we’re looking at off-lease machines now.   

If you’d have told me I’d be looking at 4 year old machines to buy a few years ago, I’d have wondered what the deal was. I suppose that’s the “New Reality” seeping to golf maintenance. Do more with less and make what you have last longer. Personally, for me, this is a great time. I think it’s great for those of us who enjoy the challenge of keeping things going rather than getting “New” every other year.   

This is a time for “real mechanics” to have a ball. Thinking a bit more about it, I’m not so sure manufactures would be thrilled with me right now.. How can you sell new equipment when you have a group of people who can keep what you have already out there, going for just about forever..

Sometimes you just need a break

image121371235.jpgIt’s my day off but I came in, I knew we’d be shorthanded and I can use the overtime. Good thing, two called off and the fertilizer guy drove off with his fill hose attached ;)

Who could get excited about an oil?

I could! Just got off the phone with the folks at Jacobsen and we’ll be getting some of their new Synthetic Hydraulic fluid to try. I’ll post more tonight where I can use a bigger keyboard ;)

Most in golf know that Jacobsen has pioneered electric mowers in the industry. Currently they are producing the Eclipse 322 (3 reels, 22 inches wide??) that either comes as a full electric with battery pack, or a diesel or gas engined hybrid. There are no hydraulics on the machine. Which brings us to their Bio Hydraulic oil. Years ago they also pioneered factory fills of biodegradable hydraulic fluid in all their mowers. The first and as far as I know, only manufacture to do that.

About 10 years ago we changed our fleet over to Bio fluid. It was not without some anxiety. There weren’t that many people doing it and we were playing around with some pretty expensive equipment. But just because not that many were doing it didn’t mean it wasn’t something that would work fine. I talked to the manufacture, who were very helpful as one could imagine but they gave some references and that worked great. And actually one if my tech friends had already been working with them on bio, so he was a great source of info (Thanks BobQ :)

So we made the switch. Why?? Well, if you ever drained your car on your lawn you’d see. And if you haven’t, you can imagine. Petroleum and grass don’t mix. The second part of this is if you have hoses on a machine, it’s not a question of will they leak, but when. I change the reel hoses on all the machines that go on the greens. That’s a lot. Still, you can’t change all the hoses all the time, and the one that you didn’t get, or missed, or did change but rubbed against something, will get you.. It happens. It may be years since it happened, but it will happen..

Which brings us back to Bio. We use a vegetable based bio. I’ve looked at synthetics and others. Some look fine, some raise questions. In debating the pros and cons of the new crop, I decided to stay with what we had been using. Terresolve. We have 10 years with it and no bare spots on the course because of it, which says a lot. We’ve been buying it at R&R, buying over $400 at a time and getting free freight, which is a killer. We just found out that we can buy Jacobsen Greenscare, made by Terresolve, for less.. It has a better additive pack then what we had been buying so I’m looking forward to trying it.

And that brings us to Jacobsen’s new Synthetic oil. It’s made by Terresolve and since we have a long history with them I’m pretty comfortable trying it. AS to the benefits. Right off the bat, it has a longer life. Depending on how long and how much it costs that could possibly be a wash. I’ve asked about spills and what would need to be done. Hose it down is what I’ve been told and that’s a bit less then with the vegetable. Other benefits, I’ll see what I can find.

It’s on it’s way. I’ll keep you posted.