I've got a 2021 Conquest (2691676-00). The cutting height motor seems to have gone bad (I've only got about 50 hours on it, probably half mowing). The last time I put the deck on, it would only raise the cut height, not lower it. I've got juice to the motor both directions, so I believe the motor is bad. I'm going to fiddle with a couple other things, like manually moving the height to the middle of the travel, and see if that helps. Genuine BS part is between $330 and $450, depending on source. I also see that the part in my manual, 1715885SM, has been superseded by 709509. Mine has a label on it that says it's new and improved (WITH IMPROVED INTERNAL.. hopefully I'll be able to read the rest of that when I take it off).
Questions:
Does anybody have any experience with Flip Manufacturing? I see they have a "direct replacement" that's $100 cheaper. Would I be saving $100 or wasting $250?
Will this thing continue to eat motors? I already replaced the lift actuator, that was over $800, and was bad when I bought the tractor at 10 hours.
Why did the old part get superseded?
Any advice on extending the life? It's hard to hear these motors running over the noise of the gas engine, so I suspect they get to the end of travel. I've found that as little as the deck actually raises, I need to lower the cut height to get in and out of the garage (bring the rollers up) so I'm probably running it a lot more than was expected by the engineers, but come on!
I'm tempted to rig up a way to use a cordless drill to drive the screw, or see if I can rig a manual lever. I loved my old Broadmoor, probably built in the 70's, but this one is starting to explain why they've stopped building tractors.
Questions:
Does anybody have any experience with Flip Manufacturing? I see they have a "direct replacement" that's $100 cheaper. Would I be saving $100 or wasting $250?
Will this thing continue to eat motors? I already replaced the lift actuator, that was over $800, and was bad when I bought the tractor at 10 hours.
Why did the old part get superseded?
Any advice on extending the life? It's hard to hear these motors running over the noise of the gas engine, so I suspect they get to the end of travel. I've found that as little as the deck actually raises, I need to lower the cut height to get in and out of the garage (bring the rollers up) so I'm probably running it a lot more than was expected by the engineers, but come on!
I'm tempted to rig up a way to use a cordless drill to drive the screw, or see if I can rig a manual lever. I loved my old Broadmoor, probably built in the 70's, but this one is starting to explain why they've stopped building tractors.