Hey, I'm getting a new Kioti CK3510SE HST next week. This will be my first tractor requiring DPF for tier 4 emissions. I've tried to do a little homework on the regen stuff, seems pretty straightforward, when a regen kicks in you just keep working and let it run its course is what I basically gather. From some of the stuff I've read another takeaway I've had is that the more you run your tractor at higher RPM's the better. If what I'm thinking is wrong I hope someone will set me straight.
So with this being said, the Kioti has what they call a linked transmission switch that links the HST pedal with the throttle, so the RPM's will rise and fall with the HST pedal. So you push the pedal to move forward and the RPM's rise, like driving a car.
My question is, has anyone seen that this would make for more frequent or dirtier regens? If the hotter you run the tractor the cleaner it runs, I would think that even for loader work it would be better to just rev up to WOT and do your work. I know it would burn more diesel but wouldn't that be cleaner or better for the tractor? Or does it not matter, I assume they did a lot of testing before implementing features like this so they know what they're doing and I don't know jack, it just *seemed* counter intuitive. Again, please correct me on my ideas that I've got wrong.
So with this being said, the Kioti has what they call a linked transmission switch that links the HST pedal with the throttle, so the RPM's will rise and fall with the HST pedal. So you push the pedal to move forward and the RPM's rise, like driving a car.
My question is, has anyone seen that this would make for more frequent or dirtier regens? If the hotter you run the tractor the cleaner it runs, I would think that even for loader work it would be better to just rev up to WOT and do your work. I know it would burn more diesel but wouldn't that be cleaner or better for the tractor? Or does it not matter, I assume they did a lot of testing before implementing features like this so they know what they're doing and I don't know jack, it just *seemed* counter intuitive. Again, please correct me on my ideas that I've got wrong.