I started to post in the "what did you do today" thread, but too much to keep up with day by day, so just venting a bit, I'll summarize the last few weeks.
1) Almost a month ago I split the tractor to take 2-stage clutch to a local well regarded clutch/brake rebuilder. Apparently they are THE place to go for such things on heavy equipment in PHX. They initially say they can rebuild for a few hundred, then change their mind. Wait a week for new stack to arrive. Total cost now jumps past $700 with resurfacing the flywheel and setup of the 2 stage stack.
2) Pick up ground flywheel and "set up" pressure plate stack from "professional" well regarded shop. Get home and realize the idiot (to be too kind) used 5/16 nuts on the 8 mm studs and forked them up completely. There is NO doubt they had to know what they did, but didn't tell me, putting me into the weekend with no recourse but to wait till first of the work week, in the holidays no less. Nobody has studs that size, including local bolt and screw provider (Copper State). Wait another week for gold plated unobtanium premium deluxe super studs from local over priced monopoly Kubota stealer. Cost $20 for 2 freaking 8 mm studs, fortunately they were kind enough to add it to their order to avoid shipping.
3) Assemble all and put tractor back together along with new rubber hoses on the problematic (draining) lower return lines, hoping that blithering idiot who can't tell the difference in 5/16 and 8 mm threads (did he really think it should be THAT hard to run them up?) actually did setup correctly on the 2 stage stack.
4) 5 Gallons of UDT (~$150), welding 2 fatigue broken brackets, replacing several missing bolts, tightening about half the bolts on the tractor (previously behind silly cosmetic panels) including all 4 studs loose on the steering box. Took extra time removing every panel and going over every bolt and nut I could find. I already knew some of the front axle/loader frame bolts were missing, also apparently Kubota specific non-standard thread pitch for a 10 mm bolt (1.25 I believe?) and only locally available in "ungraded". Ordered again, supposed to be in last Friday, unknown/unspecified delay till next Tuesday.
5) Omitting a dozen lesser annoyances, all stemming from a combination of Kubota lock-in with non-standard hardware (or just not in US?) and utter incompetence (some of it my own, some the PO). Also found the entire "Easy Check" sub-harness missing from the gauge cluster, who knows why. And no surprise here, also not available from Kubota, so paid ~$25 for 3 lamps and 3 special lamp holders (to fit in the cluster) to enjoy the privilege of making my own sub-harness.
6) Can't help thinking I should have bough an older US made tractor like I've owned in the past. I've never had this much trouble with anything motorized (or so my selective memory tells me). I miss the open and easy to work on simple bullet proof tractors with only a few wires. But then again I feel the same about the old muscle cars and trucks I used to drive, but the truck I choose to drive all the time has more computing power than the space shuttle JUST to control the transmission, so I guess that about says it all...
Ok, done venting. Thanks for all the help you have all provided along the way.
1) Almost a month ago I split the tractor to take 2-stage clutch to a local well regarded clutch/brake rebuilder. Apparently they are THE place to go for such things on heavy equipment in PHX. They initially say they can rebuild for a few hundred, then change their mind. Wait a week for new stack to arrive. Total cost now jumps past $700 with resurfacing the flywheel and setup of the 2 stage stack.
2) Pick up ground flywheel and "set up" pressure plate stack from "professional" well regarded shop. Get home and realize the idiot (to be too kind) used 5/16 nuts on the 8 mm studs and forked them up completely. There is NO doubt they had to know what they did, but didn't tell me, putting me into the weekend with no recourse but to wait till first of the work week, in the holidays no less. Nobody has studs that size, including local bolt and screw provider (Copper State). Wait another week for gold plated unobtanium premium deluxe super studs from local over priced monopoly Kubota stealer. Cost $20 for 2 freaking 8 mm studs, fortunately they were kind enough to add it to their order to avoid shipping.
3) Assemble all and put tractor back together along with new rubber hoses on the problematic (draining) lower return lines, hoping that blithering idiot who can't tell the difference in 5/16 and 8 mm threads (did he really think it should be THAT hard to run them up?) actually did setup correctly on the 2 stage stack.
4) 5 Gallons of UDT (~$150), welding 2 fatigue broken brackets, replacing several missing bolts, tightening about half the bolts on the tractor (previously behind silly cosmetic panels) including all 4 studs loose on the steering box. Took extra time removing every panel and going over every bolt and nut I could find. I already knew some of the front axle/loader frame bolts were missing, also apparently Kubota specific non-standard thread pitch for a 10 mm bolt (1.25 I believe?) and only locally available in "ungraded". Ordered again, supposed to be in last Friday, unknown/unspecified delay till next Tuesday.
5) Omitting a dozen lesser annoyances, all stemming from a combination of Kubota lock-in with non-standard hardware (or just not in US?) and utter incompetence (some of it my own, some the PO). Also found the entire "Easy Check" sub-harness missing from the gauge cluster, who knows why. And no surprise here, also not available from Kubota, so paid ~$25 for 3 lamps and 3 special lamp holders (to fit in the cluster) to enjoy the privilege of making my own sub-harness.
6) Can't help thinking I should have bough an older US made tractor like I've owned in the past. I've never had this much trouble with anything motorized (or so my selective memory tells me). I miss the open and easy to work on simple bullet proof tractors with only a few wires. But then again I feel the same about the old muscle cars and trucks I used to drive, but the truck I choose to drive all the time has more computing power than the space shuttle JUST to control the transmission, so I guess that about says it all...
Ok, done venting. Thanks for all the help you have all provided along the way.