14
Maintenance

How to check the grease level inside the

worm gear housing

When we built your MANTIS Tiller, we lubricated the
worm gear housing thoroughly.
It is imperative that you inspect the grease level once a year.
Simply remove the cover plate on the worm gear housing.
(Picture 1) Then check to make sure the grease comes almost
to the top of the housing. If it doesn’t, add lithium no. 0 grease
(Item M9985.) This is the only way to add grease to the worm
gear housing. (Picture 1) To purchase Mantis grease, contact
your local authorised Mantis office.
Please do not overfill. Too much grease can create pressure,
which could cause seals to fail or the clutch to slip.
Picture 1

How to reseat the

flange

At some point, you may find
that the tines won’t turn when
you press the throttle. This may
mean the engine isn’t sitting all
the way down on the worm gear
housing.
Perhaps you’ve been using
your tiller for several years. The
flange bolt (Key no. 12, page
18) may have come loose and
lifted the engine up.
If this happened you’ll notice
a gap between the bottom of the
engine flange (Key no. 43, page
18) and the top of the worm gear
housing. (Picture 2)
To fix this, loosen the flange
bolt. Take the engine off the
worm gear housing. Notice the
hex head on top of the drive
shaft (Key no. 22, page 18).
Inside the flange housing, you’ll
find the clutch drum (Key no.
57, page 18). Make sure the hex
head lines up with the clutch drum
inside the flange housing.
Then put the engine back on the
worm gear housing. Make sure
the plastic carrying handle is not
under the engine.
If you’ve followed these steps
properly, there will be no gap
between the engine flange and the
worm gear housing. (Picture 3)
Make sure you tighten the flange
bolt!
Picture 2 … Note how the engine
doesn’t sit all the way down on the
transmission.
Picture 3… Note how the
engine sits all the way down on
the transmission.