Hello all. Brand new kubota tractor owner here. I got the L2501 from my local dealer just this past Friday. Haven't even put 5 hours on it yet. I keep it parked in my garage, which is attached to my house. I noticed the other day that the blade of the bucket appeared to sit uneven near the pavement. I began to take measurements all over the tractor to try and determine why it looked crooked with relation to the floor. I thought to myself "Have I really tweaked the bucket in 3 hours of use??" but as I investigated, I came to realize it inst just the bucket - the whole Left side of the tractor is just sitting a little higher, as if the frame is sitting about a half inch higher on the axles on the left side. You can NOT tell this is the case unless you really break out a tape measure and start measuring. It doesn't "appear" crooked to the naked eye. There is no visible tilt, warp, or anything of the sort. If not for just noticing the bucket, which was sitting low to the concrete floor I may have not zeroed in on it.
Just to further clarify the imbalance I'm seeing with the left side being higher:I measured the different in the loader, loader arm, finders, even the 3 point hitch arms, all sit 1/2" to 1" higher on the left side when measured from the floor. Whats funny is I even noticed when measuring from the top of the tire tread to the underside of the fender, there is a larger gap on the same left side - about a 1/2" more gap from tire to fender on left side. I can find this discrepancy in everything Ive tried to measure. Its as if the tractor was just built slightly off balance.
I know what you're thinking - The rear tires or the floor are causing it. That was my first go to.The first thing I did was zero in on the rear tires. I noticed that the left tire (where the tractor is a little higher) was, what I can tell, about 90% or more full of water, while the right side tire was more like 65% full of water. I drained water from the left tire to get it down to match the water level of the right side. Both tires now sit about 65% filled with water, maybe 2 inches below the valve stem at 12 o'clock. I then aired both tires up so the pressure matched exactly. I adjusted the pressure on the front tires as well until they were matched exactly. From what I can tell the concrete in my garage is completely level. I noted the same uneven measurements when the tractor was pulled out of the garage and on the concrete driveway in front of the garage. Other things I have done: Looked the tractor over thoroughly for any loose or missing bolts, any cracked or poor welds, any warps, bends, dents, anything that would throw off balance. I can find nothing wrong with the tractor with the naked eye - its shiny, brand new, and everything appears to be perfectly built and put together - This thing just isn't 100% level as it sits on the tires from all I can tell - But as I said it is not visible with the eye, and it isn't visible when using the tractor. When you sit in the chair and raise the bucket slowly for example and look over the hood, everything is perfectly balanced from the tractors standpoint, but its because the entire tractor, from what I can see based on measurements, is sitting ever so slightly at a right tilt.
So my questions are - is a little imbalance like this normal for a tractor? Am I being too "perfectionist" with this? one of my main concerns is the measurable imbalance on the 3 point hitch. I have the QH15 Land Pride Quick Hitch Attached, and I can measure the different between right and left side even at the quick hitch. Will this affect a mowing attachment when I get one, causing an uneven cut? I'm just a bit baffled.
Sorry for the long post, I wanted to explain the issue best I could.
Just to further clarify the imbalance I'm seeing with the left side being higher:I measured the different in the loader, loader arm, finders, even the 3 point hitch arms, all sit 1/2" to 1" higher on the left side when measured from the floor. Whats funny is I even noticed when measuring from the top of the tire tread to the underside of the fender, there is a larger gap on the same left side - about a 1/2" more gap from tire to fender on left side. I can find this discrepancy in everything Ive tried to measure. Its as if the tractor was just built slightly off balance.
I know what you're thinking - The rear tires or the floor are causing it. That was my first go to.The first thing I did was zero in on the rear tires. I noticed that the left tire (where the tractor is a little higher) was, what I can tell, about 90% or more full of water, while the right side tire was more like 65% full of water. I drained water from the left tire to get it down to match the water level of the right side. Both tires now sit about 65% filled with water, maybe 2 inches below the valve stem at 12 o'clock. I then aired both tires up so the pressure matched exactly. I adjusted the pressure on the front tires as well until they were matched exactly. From what I can tell the concrete in my garage is completely level. I noted the same uneven measurements when the tractor was pulled out of the garage and on the concrete driveway in front of the garage. Other things I have done: Looked the tractor over thoroughly for any loose or missing bolts, any cracked or poor welds, any warps, bends, dents, anything that would throw off balance. I can find nothing wrong with the tractor with the naked eye - its shiny, brand new, and everything appears to be perfectly built and put together - This thing just isn't 100% level as it sits on the tires from all I can tell - But as I said it is not visible with the eye, and it isn't visible when using the tractor. When you sit in the chair and raise the bucket slowly for example and look over the hood, everything is perfectly balanced from the tractors standpoint, but its because the entire tractor, from what I can see based on measurements, is sitting ever so slightly at a right tilt.
So my questions are - is a little imbalance like this normal for a tractor? Am I being too "perfectionist" with this? one of my main concerns is the measurable imbalance on the 3 point hitch. I have the QH15 Land Pride Quick Hitch Attached, and I can measure the different between right and left side even at the quick hitch. Will this affect a mowing attachment when I get one, causing an uneven cut? I'm just a bit baffled.
Sorry for the long post, I wanted to explain the issue best I could.