I bet it's been covered many times- but I can't locate a post on it. I have a B7100 HST. What name brands, weights, do I use..thax
Excellent advice, concise & on point.Get some UDT from your Kubota dealer and a hydraulic filter while you are there.
AS for engine oil - I would get anything diesel rated - 10w30 or whatever you wish, since you are in Georgia - you really do not need a 5w oil. Most here use Rotella T6 but T4, T5 will be fine too.
You could spend the extra money on the S-UDT2 oils - but in that 30 year old machine, you may not see a need to do so.
A universal tractor transmission fluid and 10W30 CK-4 diesel engine oil from your local tractor supply. Brand names do not matter.I bet it's been covered many times- but I can't locate a post on it. I have a B7100 HST. What name brands, weights, do I use..thax
JD 303 is not and never was a UTTO.Despite some of the advice above, I would be VERY wary of discount tractor hydraulic oils. You say you have the HST version and there are some low-quality oils out there that are not suitable for HST. Make sure the label clearly indicates it meets Kubota UDT specs.
Have a look at this or google "303 tractor oil lawsuit" for a discussion of the issues:
Perilously Obsolete: The Dangers of 303 Tractor Hydraulic Fluids | TractorLife
www.tractorlife.com
Despite some of the advice above, I would be VERY wary of discount tractor hydraulic oils.
There's a list very similar to this in my yanmars wsm that covers the power shift transmission. It happened to include hy trans and hy guard on the list as well as many that appear on your list.At the time a B7100 was their current model Kubota was a lot more honest about UDT. I have posted this list before but I will post it one more time. Those are just a few of the dozens of products that were satisfactory alternatives to Kubota UDT. Over the years the names have changed a bit and the list is a lot bigger.
Dan
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M2C-134D was Ford's specification which probably predated all of them. At this point in time the newest OEM formulations (e.g. Kubota SUDT2, Case/CNH Ultraction, JD HYgard J20D) have gone to a synthetic base oil with slightly lower KV100, higher viscosity index, and increased ability to absorb water. All desirable but not essential improvements for use in an HST transmission. There are not a lot of third party equivalents for them.There's a list very similar to this in my yanmars wsm that covers the power shift transmission. It happened to include hy trans and hy guard on the list as well as many that appear on your list.
Actually, the list in the WSM for the B7100 HST is a bit shorter:At the time a B7100 was their current model Kubota was a lot more honest about UDT. I have posted this list before but I will post it one more time. Those are just a few of the dozens of products that were satisfactory alternatives to Kubota UDT. Over the years the names have changed a bit and the list is a lot bigger.
Hokie i= Virginia Tech alum.Actually, the list in the WSM for the B7100 HST is a bit shorter:
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Times change, products change and sometimes the manual is wrong (note the same page above identifies the hydraulic system as being "closed center type"!) Heck, even Kubota UDT changes from market to market -- The UDT Kubota sells in the US has substantially different properties than the fluid in Kubota Canada's pails. So a chart in an old manual may not be accurate any more. A better guide is the spec sheet of currently available products.
I am absolutely NOT saying that Kubota UDT is the only option. After considerable research, I personally am using Amsoil's product in my B7100 HST (for cold-weather performance reasons, obviously not price! <lol>). What I AM saying is that there are inferior, unsuitable discount fluids being sold to unsuspecting owners by chain stores and that the new owner of an HST machine needs to be wary.
In defference to 85Hokie's* observation, perhaps I should modify my original comment to say "Make sure the brand is from a well-known reputable manufacturer and the label clearly indicates it meets Kubota UDT specs."
*There seems to be a brace of Hokies in on this conversation. What the heck is a "Hokie" anyway?