I am new to Kubota and have a new l3901. Having trouble pulling the engine oil dipstick out. I realize it is in a really tight spot and hard to get to but is there a trick or easier way to pull it out?
The engineers should be shot for that design - hidden, hard to reach, and nothing to grasp.I am new to Kubota and have a new l3901. Having trouble pulling the engine oil dipstick out. I realize it is in a really tight spot and hard to get to but is there a trick or easier way to pull it out?
I think it is a trait of the universal nature of the engine. Other than tractors, these engines are placed in confined boxes. Give the short twist like Boakley said works wonders. It should not have been painted, but I'm sure it saved Kubota a few cents using it as a plug when they paint the engine.The engineers should be shot for that design - hidden, hard to reach, and nothing to grasp.
Dan
A metal extension handle with a finger loop keeps running through my head.I'm thinking about enlarging the tiny cutout in the side panel
to make checking the oil more user friendly. Hard to find the dipstick
or put it back in the way it was designed, practically hidden.
Yeah Dan, I am thinking this too. If it's un-weldable plastic I may lock a pain of very small pair of vice-grips on that sucker.A metal extension handle with a finger loop keeps running through my head.
Dan
They are powered by the sun! No parts to wear out either.Times are changing for sure. I see new grass cutters advertised as no oil change required. WTH???
In Colorado….That would be the operator.Too bad they're not powered by grass.
Met with my old buddy of 50 years at Kubota place yesterday. He was remarking about the oil dip stick on his L is very hard to find. Said he should paint it a different color.I am new to Kubota and have a new l3901. Having trouble pulling the engine oil dipstick out. I realize it is in a really tight spot and hard to get to but is there a trick or easier way to pull it out?