Hi Clacker and Bruce,
I see there is a manual here
https://bwmachinery.com.au/wp-conte...linder-mowers-400CM-500CM.pdf?utm_sourceBack roller pawl disc / Pawl PE-back roller V2
What that pawl disc is actually doing
On the Bushranger roller drive, that pawl disc + plastic lugs act as a torque-limiting / engagement system:
The plastic lugs engage the outer drum to drive the roller
Under overload (wet grass, hill, sudden stop), the lugs can slip or deform slightly instead of:
stripping gears
snapping shafts
wrecking the clutch or belt
If it’s slipping now, that usually means:
The plastic lugs are worn/rounded
The recesses in the drum are worn
Or the roller clutch/belt isn’t fully engaging, so the pawl is being asked to transmit more torque than designed
Why gluing it is a bad idea
Even with a strong adhesive (epoxy, JB Weld, etc.):
Plastic + metal + shock load = glue failure
Roller drives see repeated shock loads
The glue will eventually shear
You remove the designed slip
If it does hold, the next weak link will fail
That’s usually more expensive than a pawl disc
Heat + moisture
Rollers get hot
Wet grass + washing = adhesives degrade fast
Best case: temporary fix
Worst case: broken roller shaft, stripped gearbox, or clutch damage
Better fixes
1. Inspect the whole drive system first
Before replacing parts:
Check roller drive belt tension and condition
Make sure the roller clutch cable is fully engaging (they stretch over time)
Confirm the clutch arm is actually moving to full travel
A partially engaged clutch will destroy pawls.
2. Replace the pawl disc (most common fix)
If the plastic lugs are rounded:
Replace the pawl disc
If available, replace the outer drum as well if the recesses are chewed
This is the correct, long-term solution.
3. Temporary “get-me-through-the-week” hack (if you must)
If parts aren’t immediately available and you need it running:
Shim the lugs very lightly (thin brass shim, aluminium tape, or even a single wrap of fiberglass tape)
This increases engagement without locking it solid
Expect it to be temporary
I’d still avoid glue—even as a stopgap.
My recommendation
If this were my mower:
Adjust/check clutch cable travel
Inspect belt and idler
Replace the pawl disc (and drum if worn)
Do not glue it
Cheers
Max.