38" Riding Mower, idler spring/pulley bad?

Status
Not open for further replies.
Joined
Apr 14, 2017
Messages
475
Location
TN USA
I have a 38" MTD riding mower, and the engine is solid. However, the springs and belts are old. The blade hasn't been wanting to disengage. I hit a stick, and now it won't start. I think the idler pulley has locked up. Any ideas?
 
Last edited:
Welcome to mower ownership, and the smaller they are (38"-42") the more poorly they are built.

As mentioned, simple troubleshooting by isolating components is needed to determine the cause.

If you find everything spins as it should, then look for a "binding" issue when it's all assembled.
 
I have a 3 year old 42" MTD Pony and every spindle and idler pulley has failed in less than 165 hours. Things might be binding when the belt is under tension.

Suggestion - Pull the deck, and check both pulleys and spindles. There should be no noticeable free play, grinding or housing cracking.

You can get these parts cheap on Amazon Prime. All are easy to replace. Part numbers are probably listed on your mower. The MTD parts are cheaply made, so do not be afraid to try after market parts.
 
Originally Posted By: knerml
I have a 3 year old 42" MTD Pony and every spindle and idler pulley has failed in less than 165 hours. The MTD parts are cheaply made, so do not be afraid to try after market parts.


All of the parts on these mowers is built to a very low quality / durability standard.
 
I've had this for about 8 years. It's done very well. I've replaced just blades, plugs, and filters. Of course, I only run it on non-ethanol gas, and store it in a shed.
 
Last edited:
Originally Posted By: Linctex
Originally Posted By: knerml
I have a 3 year old 42" MTD Pony and every spindle and idler pulley has failed in less than 165 hours. The MTD parts are cheaply made, so do not be afraid to try after market parts.


All of the parts on these mowers is built to a very low quality / durability standard.

MTD is at the lower end of the market. You get what you pay for.
 
It's a cheap mower, but I have a small yard and barely use it. Plus, I got it way cheaper than MSRP. I checked the belts and pulleys, and they move well. I think it's the idler spring. The blade won't engage fully, so it won't start.
 
If you're saying the starter doesn't even try, check the interlock switch on the blade control linkage (I assume it is not an electric blade clutch, rather on cheaper mowers the blade lever tightens the belt).

A mower with the blades unable to disengage is not safe. You should fix that.
 
I fixed it! The ignition switch was bad. The fuse and interlocks were fine. I replaced the shift belt, and the blades disengage now.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top