Sent the following to my dealer. I would like to hear from other l2195a owners on these two issues.
To: Kubota service manager
Alexander equipment
I recently purchased a Kubota L2195A front mounted snowblower from you. I am generally very pleased with the construction quality and neat installation. Chris worked on it and delivered. We were very pleased with his customer service during delivery.
I do have two issues with chute rotation.
The first time I went to use the blower, the chute rotation mechanism was frozen up and would not turn. I fiddled with it back and forth and it eventually freed up. I called and spoke with Chris. He assured me that there was no way in moisture could have gotten into the rotation motor hydraulics , and he believed my problem was likely ice in the chute rotation gear or bushing.
After speaking with Chris I took a close look at the chute rotation mechanism. The chute rotation ring gear is retained by several black retaining plates, attached to 3/8” spacers and held down by 8 small bolts. (See attached pictures or check with Chris). I noticed that the nut had fallen off the bottom of one of these bolts. I replaced the missing nut and in that process, I noticed that all 8 of those retaining bolts were quite loose. I snugged them up but noticed that when they were tight, the chute rotation ring gear was bound up and would not turn.
I assume that Chris noticed this when he put it together and backed those 8 bolts off enough to give clearance allowing the chute to turn. That’s the way it is now, and it does work, but if correction is not made I think it will lead to problems. The loose hold down plates and spacers allow inconsistent clearance between the rotation pinion and the ring gear. And there is nothing to keep the 8 loose nuts on the hold down plates from backing off and falling off, as has already happened once.
I am far from expert, but it appears to me that slightly thicker spacers or even washers or other shims would allow the chute ring gear clearance to turn while those 8 bolts are fully tightened. What do you think?
A separate rotation issue is with the hydraulic control valves. The installation uses the hydraulic controls from my front loader. As you would think, loader up, down, and float all act as you would expect to raise and lower the snowblower. They work fine.
Left and right on the control stick are roll forward and back on the loader bucket, and are used on the snowblower for left and right chute rotation. Left works smoothly as you would expect. But right will not rotate right until you apply strong right pressure on the stick or bang it to the right to overcome a “detent”. This does work, but is annoying on an otherwise smooth functioning and expensive piece of equipment.
When used with the front loader, there is no such detent resistance on the left/right control stick. I am curious why this is needed on the snowblower chute rotation? Is there an alternate way to hook up the hydraulics that would avoid this sticky detent?
Is there a national Kubota help number that might have answers to these questions? I bet Kubota sells very few of this model and maybe nobody has reported the spacer issue?
Many thanks for your time.
Tom Kranz
1529 mill rd
East Aurora, ny. 14052
716-652-9495
Sent from my iPhone Sent from my iPhone
To: Kubota service manager
Alexander equipment
I recently purchased a Kubota L2195A front mounted snowblower from you. I am generally very pleased with the construction quality and neat installation. Chris worked on it and delivered. We were very pleased with his customer service during delivery.
I do have two issues with chute rotation.
The first time I went to use the blower, the chute rotation mechanism was frozen up and would not turn. I fiddled with it back and forth and it eventually freed up. I called and spoke with Chris. He assured me that there was no way in moisture could have gotten into the rotation motor hydraulics , and he believed my problem was likely ice in the chute rotation gear or bushing.
After speaking with Chris I took a close look at the chute rotation mechanism. The chute rotation ring gear is retained by several black retaining plates, attached to 3/8” spacers and held down by 8 small bolts. (See attached pictures or check with Chris). I noticed that the nut had fallen off the bottom of one of these bolts. I replaced the missing nut and in that process, I noticed that all 8 of those retaining bolts were quite loose. I snugged them up but noticed that when they were tight, the chute rotation ring gear was bound up and would not turn.
I assume that Chris noticed this when he put it together and backed those 8 bolts off enough to give clearance allowing the chute to turn. That’s the way it is now, and it does work, but if correction is not made I think it will lead to problems. The loose hold down plates and spacers allow inconsistent clearance between the rotation pinion and the ring gear. And there is nothing to keep the 8 loose nuts on the hold down plates from backing off and falling off, as has already happened once.
I am far from expert, but it appears to me that slightly thicker spacers or even washers or other shims would allow the chute ring gear clearance to turn while those 8 bolts are fully tightened. What do you think?
A separate rotation issue is with the hydraulic control valves. The installation uses the hydraulic controls from my front loader. As you would think, loader up, down, and float all act as you would expect to raise and lower the snowblower. They work fine.
Left and right on the control stick are roll forward and back on the loader bucket, and are used on the snowblower for left and right chute rotation. Left works smoothly as you would expect. But right will not rotate right until you apply strong right pressure on the stick or bang it to the right to overcome a “detent”. This does work, but is annoying on an otherwise smooth functioning and expensive piece of equipment.
When used with the front loader, there is no such detent resistance on the left/right control stick. I am curious why this is needed on the snowblower chute rotation? Is there an alternate way to hook up the hydraulics that would avoid this sticky detent?
Is there a national Kubota help number that might have answers to these questions? I bet Kubota sells very few of this model and maybe nobody has reported the spacer issue?
Many thanks for your time.
Tom Kranz
1529 mill rd
East Aurora, ny. 14052
716-652-9495
Sent from my iPhone Sent from my iPhone