Digging Into The Farmall 504: Governor, Hydraulic, and Carburetor Repair Work
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- Опубликовано: 16 окт 2024
- Today I'm bringing the Farmall 504 into the shop and starting repair work on the governor, hydraulic system, and carburetor. I disassemble the hydraulic valves and explain how they work, how to diagnose problems, and what parts are needed to rebuild them. Then I move on to removing the governor, explaining how an engine governor works, what to look for when diagnosing governor problems and how to rebuild them.
Note:
-We do not offer farm tours or accept visitors
-We do not sell from the farm
-We do not ship our farm's products
-We do not sell live animals
Mailing Address:
Just a Few Acres Farm
PO Box 269
Lansing, NY 14882
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Farmallogist Pete's diagnostic analysis; the most clear, concise, entertaining and all-around-nice-guy International forensics researcher in this quadrant of this hemisphere. 😉
Hit the nail on the head. Well said
The MD says “ Hey 504! The line starts behind me!”. 😂
Really missed this "mechanical" videos... I know you refered in a late video that they don't bring a high volume of views... but... I love them!
best regards from Portugal!
Agreed
Looking forward to this winter!
These are my favorite types of videos. I understand that a lot of people may not like them but they are probably the people who are checkbook mechanics, as long as the checkbook works they can get things fixed. I appreciate these videos, they remind me there are still some people who can handle things themselves. I started turning wrenches in 76 when I was a kid, it was my first real job. I can count on one hand the number of times I have paid someone else to work on my stuff. I feel blessed to have gown up in a remote area where people had no choice but to fix everything themselves. If you did not know how to do something, someone in the area did and work was often traded between families.
I check my Farmall books. Does that count? 😝
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Yes!!!!! Another tractor video. Hope all is well Pete!
Pete, I really enjoy these mechanical videos. I always learn something. Just have to make sure there's plenty of coffee in my mug. Thanks.
Me too! please keep producing them.
Mechanic, a person who understands the mechanics of what they are working on.
Technician, a person who uses diagnostic codes to troubleshoot, and replace parts, but doesn't understand the mechanics of what they are working on.
I actually had a dealer tell me they could not fix a door latch issue because they found no codes on it. Must have been a technician and not a mechanic who worked on it. I do all my own out of warranty work myself, and I really appreciate when someone knows how to explain the functions of what they are working on and not just replacing parts.
There's a difference between knowing and understanding. Knowing is book smarts, understanding is actually observing and participating in the function of the apparatus. And it is a huge difference....
@@frankcurley Yes it is! Can't fix a simple door latch because no codes found just irked me to no end. It's a simple latch, a rod connects the door handle to it, it has a catch with a spring, lift the handle, it releases the catch and the door is unlatched. No codes found can't fix. SMDH.
No codes to fix a door latch now that's funny as hell. I turned a wrench for 30 years and was ASE certified in 7 areas of the automotive industry.
These mechanical videos are my latest obsession. Thank You for putting all of this together. I know it doesn't provide as many of the views as your normal content, but I sure like them.
I for one love the mechanical maintenance video's, as well as the "Farm daily life etc" I'll never work on a tractor again too old. but I can sure enjoy watching you work on them Pete. thanks so much for taking the time to do it and show us. Hmm must be Pork day, I've got mine in the Crock pot, didn't smoke it but gave it a good rub, seared it for perfect Maillard conditioning, before it hit the warm bath. so we'll both enjoy our pork dinners. thanks again can't wait for the follow up God Speed ECF
I too have been waiting for winter tractor work.👍
For what it’s worth, I love the mechanical videos. My dad has traded and sold farm machinery sense 1972. He has always said that the only way a farmer can ever be successful is if they can work on their own equipment. This is real American agricultural at its best. Keep it up!!
Thanks Pete. That was not only educational, but entertaining as well for us "old" tractor enthusiasts Your "teacher" methods are well used in explaining all the mechanisms. It always amazes me to see the engineering that went into the tractors, long before they had com0puters and CAD.
I like the equipment videos. I don’t think non farmers realize how much maintenance is a major part of farm life, or, how much good maintenance allows farmers to reduce capital expenses.
I also like the mechanical videos. I grew up on a farm in MS and watched my Dad and my uncle work on all their equipment. They also had all Farmall/IH equipment including a 656. Watching these videos brings back good memories for me.
My husband is pretty mechanical and handy, he loves these videos. I think they are interesting too. It is amazing how the older stuff can usually be fixed somehow.
Yay!!! We get tractor videos this winter!! 🎉
Pete, the Farmall Sensei. Thank you
I'm lost after five minutes, but I so enjoying listening to you, Pete!
Very interesting Pete, back in my day I was the machinist that would make the rod with the O-ring groves and all the parts need for it to operate. I like the fact you explained all of the functions of the shaft, along with all the other componets involved in the whole system. Nice job. I really enjoyed making unites like that and much more during my career. But I'm more interested in that pork belly you have smoking on the grill. I need the recipe.
I love when you and Squatch253 get back in the shop. It's a great way to enjoy my morning coffee when the temps are dropping.
Really glad you are doing more tractor videos.
This makes me happy! I discovered your channel because of the tractor videos and stayed for all the other amazing content. Pay no attention to all the RUclips certified mechanics that always have a “better way”.
I love your mechanics videos and I'm not even a mechanic! And I don't own any tractors! I've never just watched a mechanical vid for entertainment. I only watch them if I need to learn how to fix something. Your mechanical vids are so good I cant help but be engulfed by them! I love all your videos. Thanks for keeping it real!
Thanks for sharing & taking time to explain the mechanics & history of the 504! Fascinating!
nice to see a wrenches only repair. I do like my impact drill, but nothing like a boxed end wrench and socket wrench.
I have zero interest in tractor maintenance. That is until I found your channel. Your easy going way of explaining each step has pulled me into the world of Farmallogy!
Your mechanical knowledge is encyclopedic Pete! Always enjoy watching you take things apart and put them back together. So satisfying! Have a great weekend!
I have a IH 504 tractor and this video gave me a better understanding of the spool operation. It made my day!!!!
My favorite videos working on the international. My favorite 656 .but any international is fine. And NUTS TOO couldn't be better God bless you and your beautiful family 👉⚘⚘❤😎😎
Thank you again for sharing your time, thought, and humor on your farm.
Greasy side cutters are a useful tool for so many things. Thanks for you humor, I love it…
Pete - today is my Dad’s birthday. He has been in Heaven many years now. When you talk about tractors it reminds me of him. He worked for International Harvester. He loved tractors!
I always enjoy watching your videos I am retired also and have a little two-car garage with a wood stove but it's all clean and nice and organized I pill with old riding mowers especially wheel horses and Cub Cadet buddy enjoy watching you work on your big tractors I just have no room and have no big tractors but I really enjoy your videos
I have an international 444 gas tractor that I've been having throttle issues for some time now. It usually won't idle up, but sometimes if it does it goes straight to wide open. I've been trying to find info on governors and this video helped me so much. Thank you so much. Very informative and you explained things very well. Keep up the videos.
I enjoy the mechanical aspect of your presentation as much as the farming part. You are known around my house as my "RUclips Farmer". Keep up the good work and don't let negative comments get you down. Thank you for what you do.
These tractor maintenance and repair videos are fantastic!
I’ve recently gotten my grandfathers 504. Glad to see some videos on maintenance and repairs! Can’t wait to dig into my own!
Pete Larson: farmer, mechanic, chef...the living example of a jack of all trades!
Absolutely love the "Tractor Nerd" facts! Your Farmall knowledge is amazing! I'm not brand specific, but your videos really make me want a red tractor. Thank you for being thorough in your explinations.
Love these tractor repair videos. Even if I can't repair this stuff myself, it helps to understand how it works.
I needed your positive energy today. Thanks for teaching me about tractor maintenance!
Thank you for helping me understand how my old Farmalls work and that they can be repaired
Great to see a new tractor repair video!
Thanks Pete I’ve been watching this channel for a while and I definitely appreciate the tractor videos. Just brought home an old 504 and need to work on the governor and carb.
Great session. Thanks. I enjoy your farm tours, the animals and your feelings of responsibility for the land. At the same time I enjoy the instruction I receive when you work on equipment. You have a very interesting show and your recording techniques and presentation techniques are excellent. I spent 35+ years working in the operations department of a Nuclear Ppower Plant, 25+ years as a Simulator Instructor and classroom Instructor. You have excellent presentation skills, your command of the English language is professional but not overly technical. Knowledgeable individuals are not bored and novices are not swamped. You are an excellent training instructor.
I never miss any of your shows and watch many of them multiple times. Few understand the planning and thought that go into a good presentation. I would rate your sessions as "Exceeds Expectations." You are a master of the visual arts.
Thanks for sharing your knowledge with us. My guess is those who critique your presentations with negative comments are more concerned with their self importance than anything else. I don't generally read the comments of others because if you believe someone has something to offer that is of importance to others you bring it up in the next session.
I have no doubt the vast majority find your presentations excellent and feel like they are there in the same room with you.
4H has a saying, "Teach one, reach one," or maybe it is the other way around.
In my career I learned to examine comments for any lessons learned and incorporate them in some appropriate way when I revised the lesson plan for the next presentation and learned that there are two types of criticism, constructive and destructive. Constructive criticism gives one a feeling of satisfaction, your next presentation will be better. Destructive criticism does just that, it takes away from the learning experience. Everyone loses.
However, thank you for sharing your frustrations with us. I feel like we are friends (because you are an excellent Instructor and your teaching skills helps us connect with young) and it provides me with an opportunity to maybe show my appreciation for your skill, knowledge and communication techniques while brining a message of how each one of us can do some small thing to possibly preserve this beautiful world we are privileged to live in.
When I watch how you interact with your environment I think of the passage in the old testament informing humans have "dominion" over the animals. In my humble opinion, the word "dominion" might better be
Thank You Dr. Farmall! I knew nothing about tractors, now I is one😜🇺🇸🌹
Still staggers me Pete that people dislike videos like this. If you do not enjoy, do not watch. Cannot wait to get my new workshop going to machine flooring from English Oak downed last year and repair vintage cars. So much to do so little time as an old chap. Your channel is a gem. Stay safe from the UK.
The level of your patience and general understanding of not only mechanics, but everything in life never ceases to amaze me. It’s nice to see in the throwaway culture we live in there’s still some good old boys like you out there taking the time to fix what what can be fixed
Great video Pete I don't own a tractor and never will but I like to see things being fixed. #satisfying.
So interesting! I know nothing about engines/motors and you make it so understandable. Looking forward to the follow up video.
You just amaze me you’re young enough that your mind is just very clear and you know what you’re doing I like that I used to help my husband rebuild a car one time the motor I enjoyed it but I was very young
Really impressed with your knowledge. Being able to cut wires and able to replace in the proper order. Looking forward to the next video.
Thanks pete. Just noticed last eve brush-hoggin that mine runs with a pretty slow cycle of unevenness. Its tolerable but now i know what i will be into. Plus, great lookin pastures in the post i saw this morn (the f-20). All you have done at the farm and taken us along with ya is remarkable
Hi Peter another great video on the 504 enjoyed it immensely. 👍🏴
Thank you for all of your step by step information and advice it’s absolutely very helpful!! Thank so much ! You sir are such a great guy! 😊👍
I am amazed of all the things you do in the farm. You are a blessed man.
Thanks for the video.
your memory is better than mine! after taking off a few washers and pieces I would never get it back together. It is awesome that you take old tractors and make them run like new!
These are my favorite types of videos.
Gotta take care of the 504. It takes care of you. Love the videos
I'm amazed at your knowledge being a draftsman to a mechanic !!! Saves lots of money !
glad you decided to do another repair video. I enjoy the way you do those. I am always apprehensive around mechanical stuff because i am not practiced in it. Thanks so much for all your videos! I may not ever tear a governor apart and rebuild but i love the education.
🐼 Big Bear Hugs from a 68 yr old grandma in Kirby, Texas, USA 🐼 ❤️ 🎀 ❤️ 🎀 ❤️ 🎀
Ive waited all summer for a video like this! You do a great job of being very thorough and informative.
Thanks for doing these mechanical videos. Very informative and I really enjoy watching them! Glad you are still doing them!!
Pete, just wanted to echo the other commenters that I love the tractor repair issues. I think its great to show the wide range of your skills and you do an excellent job of explaining the work while you do it. I understand why you may be hesitant to film your continued work on the MD this winter, but for me I hope you chose to film it. I am looking forward to it.
Love the mechanics vids! It's refreshing seeing how methodical you are with fixing and repairing anything. People don't realize that that's the other side of the coin when it comes to the farming. You're sort of a jack of all trades so whether you're just having a conversation with your wife running around the farm with the animals or working on tractors I love it all man keep it up!!!
Thank you for taking the time to show how everything works! Your knowledge is impeccable!!!!!
It's amazing how you understand everything on the tractor
Pete, I can't think of a video you've put out that didn't bummer me out because it ended. I always want it to last a little while longer.
You are at your best with the mechanic videos.
Thank you for sharing these videos. I recently acquired a used Kabota. Your videos give me terminology and familiarity I can use when reading the manual. Enjoy your work.
Hi Pete, very fascinating video, thanks 🙏 so much. These old engineered tractors are quite a marvel. They are well thought out and the people who designed them must have had some smarts. Your explanation are clear and precise. Thanks again and take care.
Thank you for continuing your Tractor repair videos. I know you mentioned in a past video that viewers drop off in the winter when you post a bunch of these videos.
My opinion is that you keep making these videos so that your children if they desire to continue farming have these videos as a dionystic tool to troubleshoot the vehicles.
That is my two cents, keep up the great work. Love your videos and the amount of mentorship you bring to youtube.
Thank you,
Traver
Keep making these repair vids Pete, and....nice shop!
VERY informative! Thank you for sharing this. I'm not the LEAST bit mechanically capable, but you broke it down and explained it so well I'm fascinated.
Loved watching and seeing the design. I don't know about you but I often wonder about the guys who thought up how to make these parts work - the lying in bed at night thinking then jumping out in the morning with that Aha moment, then seeing it made and testing - and feeling the joy of getting it finally doing the intended function. Mankind has done a lot of that in just over the last two or three hundred years - nowadays the same is happening with electronics and so many other technologies - thanks for sharing
That Pork looked awesome! @25:16 Someone was telling me about a new thing on them lights called a magnet. Never seen one but I've hear of it. :) THanks for this awesome education! Y'all are in my top 5 favorite channels. Keep up the great living and thanks for sharing.
Thanks for the detail. I have some old tractors too, and I have just been working with what they give me. I appreciate getting the gist of what's going on inside. Maybe one day when I have a heater and space in my shop I'll dig into one of mine.
I LOVE the tractor videos. I Loved the MD videos last winter and I can't wait to see the rest of the restoration. It's such good information that I plan to use when I restore our super A
This was a fascinating and very interesting video. I love the detail you go through to explain the inner workings.
Way back in the 70s, I used to work in the parts and repair department of a Sears Roebuck store. They had microfiche with parts for everything they sold. Had to look up almost everything given the model number. It was an amazing variety of parts to order.
Great video, Pete. I'm glad you are making the mechanical videos again. I enjoy all your videos, but these especially. Keep up the great work, I'm looking forward to part two.
When I was a kid I remember a neighbor that had two 504 Farmall tractors. He used them growing field corn and also in the hay field. I like the wide front-end on yours as both of his were the tricycle narrow front-end. Great detail in this video of the hydraulics and carb/governor assemblies.
Great video Pete and I too like these mechanical videos, as others have stated. Always a pleasure to watch and experience those things with you. Thanks for sharing and have a wonderful weekend!
I dig the tractor videos. It's how I operate on my place. At least try to fix it myself and learn. Last resort is taking it to somebody. Thanks Pete!!!
I'm so glad you're sharing these details with us. I was afraid you wouldn't because of the haters. But rest assured, many of us are fascinated, and rarely see this level of detail in anything mechanical. I love it!
Pete, I love these videos! Can't wait for the MD to come back in to complete it's rebuild!
It’s good to see you back to being a mechanic. I like it that you explain everything in detail. When you get an IH dozer with a blade and go through it, it will be delightful! Then, look out snow and ice?
Im one of your viewers that really like your mechanical series. Its all good Pete
Very interesting video on par with the WD9 like your takedown and rebuild explanations and talents, looking forward to the next steps to get it running again.
Good video. I love that you keep old hardware running. I would love to do a rebuild some day.
Owning a 656 gas farmall is kinda a lost art. I really really like the videos it keeps me in the know. I want keep the old stuff going. It took me a long time to figure out the ta adjustment. With a new clutch tractor would not roll. Found the ta was out of adjustment. Found the information on a web site. Which is not right in the service manual on how to adjust it. I am very excited on the carb rebuild. The right way to do it !!!!!! Thank you so much pete your work on the channel is so oooooo helpful for guys like me!
Great job. Keep them coming. Y'all stay safe and good luck.
I never knew a tractor could be so complicated! I guess the governor keeps real busy hunting for acorns and balancing the butterflies!
What a great explanation of a spool and it's detents...
I enjoy watching these videos Pete!! Very informative.
Very interesting video. Look forward to seeing it being put back together. 😊
Hi Pete. You don’t have to worry about making wrenching videos (your comments on Time to build an Ark!). You are blessed in that the way you present a video you’re able to make it interesting, informative and entertaining, all at the same time. With regards to wrenching I put you up there with mustie1, the benchmark when it comes to wrenching videos on RUclips. You are in exalted company! Keep going buddy. Cheers from OZ.
I have said it before and I'll say it again; I love this time of year! Great, informative video Pete.
Great video Pete, thank you for the straight forward, simple explanation of how both the spool valves and the governor work. Governor I am familiar with, but the spool valve was some new information. Looking forward to putting everything back together,
my dad rebuilt the hydraulic valves on our 504 farmal,i watched him but it was nothing like my 1947 harry ferguson to20, i drove that since i was 5yo in 1950,i still have it,my cousin brought from vermont to me in virginia 8 yeares ago. ihve since went from 6 volt negative ground to 12 volt positive ground,also installed prestolite in the distributor.