There are a few threads on some of the smaller B & L units overheating when mowing. I can personally verify this and attest to it happening and the cause, and the resolution.
The Incident:
I was following the standard advice when mowing my 6 acres last week. I have a native grass/weed that forms downy soft tufts on long shafts. These tufts come apart and clog up the front screen so I had to clean that screen every hour. What I was NOT seeing is that some of it got through the screen and started plugging up the radiator. You don't see anything on the front of rear of the radiator, it is actually in the fins/corrugations themselves.
The way it plays out is that you see a slight temperature increase over time. I had been mowing over the course of two days and near the end of the work, my temps had gone from near the bottom to almost horizontal in the 'safe' zone. I looked at my gauges about every 10-15 minutes. I started smelling antifreeze and looked down at my gauge. It had gone from mid horizontal to maxxed out in less than 10 minutes.
I shut down the tractor and opened the hood. The safety boil over features worked perfectly. The steam generated by the radiator was pushed into the overflow bottle giving it a boiling appearance. It then escaped via the overflow tube and this gave my nose the 'heads up' that something was wrong with the cooling system.
I let it cool down and then restarted it to check for damage to the engine (thankfully none, no head gasket or other damage. Oil good, but it did suck the entire overflow contents back into the radiator!). I got more anti-freeze and filled the container. Further use sucked back in no additional fluids so it had only lost about a pint or so of fluid.
The Cause:
I investigated the issue while the tractor was cooling down. I found the front screen had very little stuff on it (I had just cleaned it 30 mins earlier) so then I looked in the fins. I could see the blockages, and it wasn't very much. About 1 out of 4 passages had some form of blockage, but very few had total blockage.
I got a small shop vac and blew out the radiator, back to front, and vacuumed it out from the front and then from what I could access on the back. A small cloud of garbage came out but it was enough to cause the overheat problem when the tractor is under load.
Restart with the radiator cleaned, even running under same load, showed the unit remained cool. So only a small amount of 'junk' in the radiator fins in capable of overheating the unit when working it under what I would call a normal load.
So part of this cause is design related to the tractor. The radiator is just big enough to handle normal workloads, so watch it when working the units hard. It is also subject to blockage due to the corrugated heat sinks between the fins.
The Solution:
Notes from the Experience:
Word of learned advice, that temp gauge is your buddy, don't let it out of sight for long. There's not enough headroom in the cooling of these smaller units and no automatic shutdown. If you smell coolant, stop and check it out immediately!
Attached is a picture of the rig so you can see the setup.
The Incident:
I was following the standard advice when mowing my 6 acres last week. I have a native grass/weed that forms downy soft tufts on long shafts. These tufts come apart and clog up the front screen so I had to clean that screen every hour. What I was NOT seeing is that some of it got through the screen and started plugging up the radiator. You don't see anything on the front of rear of the radiator, it is actually in the fins/corrugations themselves.
The way it plays out is that you see a slight temperature increase over time. I had been mowing over the course of two days and near the end of the work, my temps had gone from near the bottom to almost horizontal in the 'safe' zone. I looked at my gauges about every 10-15 minutes. I started smelling antifreeze and looked down at my gauge. It had gone from mid horizontal to maxxed out in less than 10 minutes.
I shut down the tractor and opened the hood. The safety boil over features worked perfectly. The steam generated by the radiator was pushed into the overflow bottle giving it a boiling appearance. It then escaped via the overflow tube and this gave my nose the 'heads up' that something was wrong with the cooling system.
I let it cool down and then restarted it to check for damage to the engine (thankfully none, no head gasket or other damage. Oil good, but it did suck the entire overflow contents back into the radiator!). I got more anti-freeze and filled the container. Further use sucked back in no additional fluids so it had only lost about a pint or so of fluid.
The Cause:
I investigated the issue while the tractor was cooling down. I found the front screen had very little stuff on it (I had just cleaned it 30 mins earlier) so then I looked in the fins. I could see the blockages, and it wasn't very much. About 1 out of 4 passages had some form of blockage, but very few had total blockage.
I got a small shop vac and blew out the radiator, back to front, and vacuumed it out from the front and then from what I could access on the back. A small cloud of garbage came out but it was enough to cause the overheat problem when the tractor is under load.
Restart with the radiator cleaned, even running under same load, showed the unit remained cool. So only a small amount of 'junk' in the radiator fins in capable of overheating the unit when working it under what I would call a normal load.
So part of this cause is design related to the tractor. The radiator is just big enough to handle normal workloads, so watch it when working the units hard. It is also subject to blockage due to the corrugated heat sinks between the fins.
The Solution:
- Clean the front screen every hour when mowing.
- Check the radiator passages every other front screen cleaning.
- Keep something handy to blow or vacuum out the radiator, don't use compressed air, high volume, lower pressure air works fine.
- Watch your temp gauge every 5 minutes or more often, it happened really fast from horizontal to max. I had just thought the elevated temperature was due to the day warming up.
Notes from the Experience:
- There is also no overheat shut down safety. These engines are modern enough it should give a buzzer at the redline and shut down at a max temp. That's a $10 circuit that could save thousands of dollars in repairs, come on Kubota, you have safeties on everything else, this makes it look like you're wanting the units to damage themselves. What if my temp sender was malfunctioning? (it wasn't) Heckuva warranty repair bill if it was. I had thought there was an overheat warning, there isn't so that gauge is your only warning, keep an eye on it.
- I have the gear drive L3200, it probably would've been more of a problem with the HST, both from a heating up perspective and an inconsistent speed operation since the pedal lets you control everything. On the gear drive you put it in gear and rev up to PTO RPM and let it go. Speed is controlled by what gear you are in. I mowed the lower stuff in 4th and it worked without complaint, the higher stuff in 3rd, much slower but it had the best cut. I ended off in 4th in some tough stuff so that added to the load on the unit, now I will never cut in 4th unless the stuff is under a foot in height or very thin.
- While this incident was with the mower, I can assume the problem might existing with plowing, rototilling, even scraping/grading if you are getting enough junk churned up in the air. So be careful.
Word of learned advice, that temp gauge is your buddy, don't let it out of sight for long. There's not enough headroom in the cooling of these smaller units and no automatic shutdown. If you smell coolant, stop and check it out immediately!
Attached is a picture of the rig so you can see the setup.
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