I’m the guy that had the problem with a stump damaging my sensor. I had a buddy replace it but it still doesn’t work. Tractor won’t start and code comes up again even after clearing it. He put an ohm meter on the repaired harness plug and it’s good but when he tried the ohm meter on the new sensor it doesn’t show anything. Should the ohm meter show a connection when touching the sensor terminals? Maybe I got a bad replacement sensor? Anybody know if the ohm meter should show a connection when touched to the sensor? My local Kubota dealer is not too helpful.
Thanks
Rod
That's because Kubota doesn't give the dealers a lot of info to go on. You have to physically go halfway across the country to a hands-on school in order to get good info out of them. That's sad, IMO, but it does give tech's and dealer principles an incentive to get trained up-to better help their customers.
The sensor can't be tested with a traditional ohm meter. Well it "can" but you also need the correct adapter for the meter to read it. For 99% of us, out of our budget and knowledge base. So I don't worry with that. Even with the correct stuff, the readings don't tell you whether it's "right" or not because Kubota doesn't give any specification for it.
You can't clear the code from the dash and expect it to stay "cleared". Kubota screwed around on these. You can clear it, but because the code is also stored in the ECU, it'll just come back and pop up in the dash again. Yay. Only way to clear it from ECU is with diagmaster-which is proprietary to Kubota and their dealers. So basically you have to take it to a dealer and have it cleared once the necessary repair(s) are completed. I don't like it but I understand why they do it
PO336 can be a lot of things, so if a sensor doesn't fix it, test the wiring between the sensor connector and the ECU; there's 3 wires as I recall. Look for excessive resistance. If resistance is high, you have a wiring problem and/or corrosion. If not, there are several possibilities ranging from a flywheel issue to ECU issue to ECU connector corrosion, of those 3, I have seen all of them-and then some. But 99% of the time it's wiring related, trail debris knocking wires off, rats, mice, squirrels, etc.