jigglypuff
New member
Equipment
Kubota L3000DT with LA450S Loader; MX4800 with LA1065 Loader; Howse RTC70 Tiller
Update: so after a lot of consideration and enjoying the conversation on this forum, I decided to do a diesel flush.
I appreciate all the advice and my decision was informed by, and considered, all the advice. In the end my old school uncle, who has done diesel transmission flushes for longer than I’ve been alive, convinced me.
My procedure: 1. Drain tranny overnight, clean filter screen. 2. Replace screen and all plugs, fill tranny with three gallons of diesel. 3. Run engine for three minutes (no play on hitch or loader). 4. Drain diesel overnight, clean screen. 5. Replace plugs, screen, fill to specs with hydraulic oil. 6. Back in business
I admit that I was skeptical at first and remained so after reading reply’s to my original thread, and was leaning toward a straight hydraulic oil flush. In the end I trusted my uncles judgement.
After running the clean diesel for three minutes, it drained out a milky colored thicker consistency that told me it flushed out a high percentage of the water contaminated hydro fluid.
The hydraulics are back in good working order and everything seems to be working right. Any long term affects to the pump or it’s seals will be reported here, but nothing noticeably out of wack after running a tiller on the back end for a couple hours.
This might not have been the “right” way to flush a transmission, but it was a way that worked for me. I guess you don’t always have to follow the textbook when it comes to certain things.
Any comments or questions welcome
Hi
On another thread I’m getting some great advice on addressing some hydraulic issues (no lift, water contamination, possible crossed hoses) on my new to me L3000DT 4wd, manual trans. I planned to address the problem in part, by draining and flushing the transmission (7.4 gal capacity) twice before final fill. Flushing with cheapest possible hydro oil.
I stopped at a local kubota dealer to wish and browse new tractors and a friendly mechanic suggested I simply add three gallons of diesel, yes, diesel, to the drained transmission, run engine for two minutes (don’t work hitch or loader) drain out diesel, then make final fill with clean hydro fluid. The end
I did a double take and asked “diesel in the transmission??” to which the mechanic replied with a smile “it’s amazing what diesel can clean.” I asked at least two more times and he said it’ll do the job, save 15 gallons of wasted hydro oil and that $6 of diesel vs $100 + of hydro fluid (using cheapest stuff) is obviously cheaper.
A forum search on this came up empty and was wondering if others have tried this or had any hot takes on this method?
Would diesel have an adverse effect on the L3000 DT dry clutch or gears? Is this crazy?
I’m intrigued.
I appreciate all the advice and my decision was informed by, and considered, all the advice. In the end my old school uncle, who has done diesel transmission flushes for longer than I’ve been alive, convinced me.
My procedure: 1. Drain tranny overnight, clean filter screen. 2. Replace screen and all plugs, fill tranny with three gallons of diesel. 3. Run engine for three minutes (no play on hitch or loader). 4. Drain diesel overnight, clean screen. 5. Replace plugs, screen, fill to specs with hydraulic oil. 6. Back in business
I admit that I was skeptical at first and remained so after reading reply’s to my original thread, and was leaning toward a straight hydraulic oil flush. In the end I trusted my uncles judgement.
After running the clean diesel for three minutes, it drained out a milky colored thicker consistency that told me it flushed out a high percentage of the water contaminated hydro fluid.
The hydraulics are back in good working order and everything seems to be working right. Any long term affects to the pump or it’s seals will be reported here, but nothing noticeably out of wack after running a tiller on the back end for a couple hours.
This might not have been the “right” way to flush a transmission, but it was a way that worked for me. I guess you don’t always have to follow the textbook when it comes to certain things.
Any comments or questions welcome
Hi
On another thread I’m getting some great advice on addressing some hydraulic issues (no lift, water contamination, possible crossed hoses) on my new to me L3000DT 4wd, manual trans. I planned to address the problem in part, by draining and flushing the transmission (7.4 gal capacity) twice before final fill. Flushing with cheapest possible hydro oil.
I stopped at a local kubota dealer to wish and browse new tractors and a friendly mechanic suggested I simply add three gallons of diesel, yes, diesel, to the drained transmission, run engine for two minutes (don’t work hitch or loader) drain out diesel, then make final fill with clean hydro fluid. The end
I did a double take and asked “diesel in the transmission??” to which the mechanic replied with a smile “it’s amazing what diesel can clean.” I asked at least two more times and he said it’ll do the job, save 15 gallons of wasted hydro oil and that $6 of diesel vs $100 + of hydro fluid (using cheapest stuff) is obviously cheaper.
A forum search on this came up empty and was wondering if others have tried this or had any hot takes on this method?
Would diesel have an adverse effect on the L3000 DT dry clutch or gears? Is this crazy?
I’m intrigued.
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