Hi Folks - Looking for some guidance for an overheat situation with my HST. I have a 2016 BX2670-1 with about 48 hours on it. At hour 44, I performed the 50 hour service and changed the HST filter replacing with a OEM Kubota filter, and also cleaned the HST screen. I overfilled the HST (accidentally) to about 5/8 inch above the full mark on the dipstick. Between hour 44 and 48, I bush hogged (using a 42inch land pride cutter) a heavily overgrown field with hills, requiring 4wd most of the time. The temp gauge never went over 3 bars. All of this work was done in low gear and between 3000-3200 rpm. I worked for an hour, took a break for 30 mins, and then work for over 2 hours nonstop. This was the hardest I have ever worked the tractor. In the second mowing session, the transmission got extremely hot and exhibited the following symptoms:
While I was mowing, the cutter kept dropping and I would have to raise it up periodically.
The transmission has noticeably louder at idle than it was before I hogged.
At idle, it would not lift the cutter off the ground. I had to raise the rpms to 2000 to lift the cutter. Prior to the 2 hr session, it would raise cutter fine at idle.
When I was raising and lowering the cutter while mowing, the transmission made a noise I had never heard before, kind of a squirting noise.
The FEL and steering continued to operate as normal.
After letting the mower cool off for 2 hours, the noise abated and the raising and lowering of the cutter seemed to work as before. I didnt run it enough to really do a comparison as I didnt want to mess it up more. I didn't really realize that things were not as normal until after I stopped mowing and started thinking about it. Had a job to do and was in the zone...
I now am in the middle of draining the HST fluid (factory fill) and replacing with UDT2. I am also replacing HST filter with another OEM Kutoba filter. I also cleaned the HST screen, and am attaching photos of the screen. These filings are from approx 3.5 hrs of (extremely hard) use.
So my question is did overheating the transmission permanently damage it? If so how can I diagnose the damage, or should I take it to the dealer? Anything to watch for? What are the chances that overheating it will cause it to fail down the line? Basically I am looking for some help in better understanding if I have screwed up my beloved tractor, and to what degree. Thanks for any and all help.
While I was mowing, the cutter kept dropping and I would have to raise it up periodically.
The transmission has noticeably louder at idle than it was before I hogged.
At idle, it would not lift the cutter off the ground. I had to raise the rpms to 2000 to lift the cutter. Prior to the 2 hr session, it would raise cutter fine at idle.
When I was raising and lowering the cutter while mowing, the transmission made a noise I had never heard before, kind of a squirting noise.
The FEL and steering continued to operate as normal.
After letting the mower cool off for 2 hours, the noise abated and the raising and lowering of the cutter seemed to work as before. I didnt run it enough to really do a comparison as I didnt want to mess it up more. I didn't really realize that things were not as normal until after I stopped mowing and started thinking about it. Had a job to do and was in the zone...
I now am in the middle of draining the HST fluid (factory fill) and replacing with UDT2. I am also replacing HST filter with another OEM Kutoba filter. I also cleaned the HST screen, and am attaching photos of the screen. These filings are from approx 3.5 hrs of (extremely hard) use.
So my question is did overheating the transmission permanently damage it? If so how can I diagnose the damage, or should I take it to the dealer? Anything to watch for? What are the chances that overheating it will cause it to fail down the line? Basically I am looking for some help in better understanding if I have screwed up my beloved tractor, and to what degree. Thanks for any and all help.
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