John
Guest
This tends to be a true statement! The 649T cranks are good at original size, but when ground or ground and shot peened they just don't stand up in the turbo models. The natural aspirated aka 180_185 and the F Gleaners had a better chance of not breaking the crank after a grinding but I wouldn't hold my breathe there either. I personally know of several 190XT's, 7000's and 7020's that had ground cranks put in them and in less than 100 hrs had broken cranks. I am a degreed diesel mechanic and have owned all of the above mentioned tractors and combine which didn't need the crank but I had the info and still have the 8000 series tractors and an N6. You might want to think about doing the bottom end_crank job before it ventilates the block with a rod or does major damage, the crank isn't cheap either, but it is less than an engine. The others can correct me if I am wrong, but when I last checked the 649 crank was more expensive than the 670 crank.