Another nothing burger

TheOldHokie

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Lifetime Member

Equipment
L3901/LA525, B7200DT/B1630, G2160/RCK60, G2460/RCK60
Apr 6, 2021
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Myersville, MD
windyridgefarm.us
New L3901 purchased in April 2021. The regens have been as regulat as clockwork - 40 hour intervals up through 120 hours. Then nothing. I was coming up on 190 and starting to wonder/worry. Did I miss one or is something wrong? Then this morning I had just fired it up to take a bunch of recyclables to the road and the regen and RPM light were blinking. Kicked the RPM up tp 2300 and the RPM light went out but regen kept blinking. The temp was still down around cold and sure enough - a couple minutes later the gauge hit middle and regen went solid. Ten minutes later three loads of recyclables had been delivered and the fourth regen was complete. I am guessing all of the mowing this summer kept RPMs high and I was getting passive regens. The dead fresh road diesel it drinks probably helps as well.

Just a little story for anyone who finds themself in a similar situation.

Dan
 
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Pawnee

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Equipment
L2501
Jul 1, 2021
351
306
63
Ontario Canada
Nice to read a good story once in a while. :)

Most of the forum is about trouble but that makes sense. Nobody needs help with something that works the way it should.
 
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DB-n-VA

New member

Equipment
L4060HST, open station with T-N-T kit.
Oct 5, 2021
13
13
3
Central Virginia
New L3901 purchased in April 2021. The regens have been as regulat as clockwork - 40 hour intervals up through 120 hours. Then nothing. I was coming up on 190 and starting to wonder/worry. Did I miss one or is something wrong? Then this morning I had just fired it up to take a bunch of recyclables to the road and the regen and RPM light were blinking. Kicked the RPM up tp 2300 and the RPM light went out but regen kept blinking. The temp was still down around cold and sure enough - a couple minutes later the gauge hit middle and regen went solid. Ten minutes later three loads of recyclables had been delivered and the fourth regen was complete. I am guessing all of the mowing this summer kept RPMs high and I was getting passive regens. The dead fresh road diesel it drinks probably helps as well.

Just a little story for anyone who finds themself in a similar situation.

Dan
It's nice to hear that the system is working as it should. Most people never read their tractor's operating manual when they get a new tractor. The new tractors are supposed to be ran at a higher RPM all the time. It also tells you to run onroad diesel as well, not offroad. You my friend are doing what Kubota is asking.
 

NCL4701

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L4701, T2290, WC68, grapple, BB1572, Farmi W50R, Howes 500, 16kW IMD gen, WG24
Apr 27, 2020
2,789
4,227
113
Central Piedmont, NC
Same experience with my L4701. It doesn’t have a “soot meter” or whatever it is on the nicer models so I can’t track passive regen activity. But I have experienced more frequent regens if I’ve spent numerous hours forking stuff around, even at 1800 to 2000 RPM v the same hours chipping or heavy brush hogging near WOT putting a heavy load on the engine. The Tier 4’s, and maybe all diesels, seem to like being run hard.
 

fried1765

Well-known member

Equipment
Kubota L48 TLB, Ford 1920 FEL, Ford 8N, SCAG Liberty Z, Gravely Pro.
Nov 14, 2019
7,843
5,066
113
Eastham, Ma
New L3901 purchased in April 2021. The regens have been as regulat as clockwork - 40 hour intervals up through 120 hours. Then nothing. I was coming up on 190 and starting to wonder/worry. Did I miss one or is something wrong? Then this morning I had just fired it up to take a bunch of recyclables to the road and the regen and RPM light were blinking. Kicked the RPM up tp 2300 and the RPM light went out but regen kept blinking. The temp was still down around cold and sure enough - a couple minutes later the gauge hit middle and regen went solid. Ten minutes later three loads of recyclables had been delivered and the fourth regen was complete. I am guessing all of the mowing this summer kept RPMs high and I was getting passive regens. The dead fresh road diesel it drinks probably helps as well.

Just a little story for anyone who finds themself in a similar situation.

Dan
Congratulations on the good news.
I will never have a regen delight experience!😪
 
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SDT

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Equipment
multiple and various
Apr 15, 2018
3,251
1,041
113
SE, IN
Where is this in owners manual? And what is the reason behind it?
Good question.

I have read all of my Kubota Operator's manuals cover-to-cover, both previously owned models and currently owned models, and have found no such directions in any.
 
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DaveFromMi

Well-known member

Equipment
L3901 RCR1260
Apr 14, 2021
610
530
93
Indiana
Mine once did a regen while bush hogging. I was running at PTO speed, regen light came on. No engine speed light. 8 minutes later, the regen light went out.
It got funky and would not do a regen once. It requested parked regen, but that turned out OK.
 

D2Cat

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Equipment
L305DT, B7100HST, TG1860, TG1860D, L4240
Mar 27, 2014
13,816
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40 miles south of Kansas City
I don't think off road diesel is an option in many countries Kubota sells tractors. Using dyed diesel does not effect engine life or performance. I don't think (off road fuel uses is prohibited) it's actually printed in any Kubota manuals.

Perhaps DB-n-VA can post a picture of the source he's using so we'll all be up to speed.
 

bmblank

Well-known member

Equipment
2020 L3901HST, LA525 Loader, 66" Q/A Bucket, PFL2042 Forks, Meteor SB68PT Blower
Mar 4, 2015
662
292
63
Cadillac, MI
I wanna say mine has done 2, but it must have been 3 now - it's almost 150hrs old. I've gotta be getting darn close to the next one, but it just keeps on holding out, despite the pretty low RPMs I've been running recently.
 

bmblank

Well-known member

Equipment
2020 L3901HST, LA525 Loader, 66" Q/A Bucket, PFL2042 Forks, Meteor SB68PT Blower
Mar 4, 2015
662
292
63
Cadillac, MI
I think the book says somewhere around 2k. If you run it high to begin with you will rarely even have to do a regen. If you do a lot of idling (like I have, loading and unloading deck furniture by hand onto pallets on the forks) you'll end up having to crank it up to 2k or whatever and do a regen.
 

TheOldHokie

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Lifetime Member

Equipment
L3901/LA525, B7200DT/B1630, G2160/RCK60, G2460/RCK60
Apr 6, 2021
8,735
4,477
113
Myersville, MD
windyridgefarm.us
I think the book says somewhere around 2k. If you run it high to begin with you will rarely even have to do a regen. If you do a lot of idling (like I have, loading and unloading deck furniture by hand onto pallets on the forks) you'll end up having to crank it up to 2k or whatever and do a regen.
Check your ankle for a string or rope - I think someone is pulling your leg.

Dan
 
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bmblank

Well-known member

Equipment
2020 L3901HST, LA525 Loader, 66" Q/A Bucket, PFL2042 Forks, Meteor SB68PT Blower
Mar 4, 2015
662
292
63
Cadillac, MI
Very possibly. I guess I'm in a talkative mood or something.
 
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MapleLeafFarmer

Well-known member

Equipment
Lots incl. B and L kubotas
Dec 2, 2019
626
480
63
E.
Where is this in owners manual? And what is the reason behind it?
It depends on what owners manual and where in the world you are. Often stuff is pulled off internet where jurisdiction of manual is maybe not appropriate for where you reside.

Kubota is a world wide company so they talk bigger picture than many of the "vocal local" guys on this forum.

In the USA, yes off road and on road diesel is the same except for added dye so tax breaks can be tracked and enforced between various groups or right holders. However for most of the world and people in it this is not true.

For the vast majority of people in the world, off road diesel is much different than on road diesel. For most people in the world off road diesel will be in the 10,000 ppm sulfer content area BUT same areas on road is low sulfer as lot of cars are made by European or north American companies which are designed for the lower sulfer but local made large trucks and off road equipment do not need low sulfer, etc.... Place the two side by side and the difference is night and day.

That's why American kubotas have DPF's yet those in other areas do not as diesel is different.

So FWIW just take care you are looking at an online WSM or Op. manual or other manuals you are looking at the one for your jurisdiction as only 4% of the world resides in the U.S.A. . Lots of stuff on internet is not necessarily applicable to the USA as 96% of the world is elsewhere.

Most people here are from N.A. but there are others who are the other 96%'er.

Narrow view and operationally for us in USA and Canada... all diesel is the same.... larger view it is not.

Cheers
 

DB-n-VA

New member

Equipment
L4060HST, open station with T-N-T kit.
Oct 5, 2021
13
13
3
Central Virginia
Where is this in owners manual? And what is the reason behind it?
It appears that I referenced the wrong manual. I have read a lot information in the last year regarding the use of both and the source in which I'm referring to was not saved to my laptop but it was from a Kubota document. But being a owner of multiple diesel engines over a long time now, I have a good understanding of what do and how they run. I'm attaching the web address to a Kubota website regarding ULSD and LSD use in their engines.
https://www.kubotaengine.com/parts-...tra-low-sulfur-diesel-for-mechanical-engines/
ULSD is much cleaner and is the reason why auto makers was pushed to use it to clean-up exhaust emissions. The cleaner the fuel, the less the emissions will clog up causing a regen to happen.
Back when Cummins was putting the 5.9L in their trucks, the engine power band was lower to save on fuel usage. When Cummins was forced to comply with the EPA, they started with adding the DPF on their trucks. In order to get the DPF to function properly, the engine needed to be run faster to create more heat helping the cleaning of the DPF and burn more of the soot from the DPF. Kubota's system is very similar in its operation. It only makes sense to run cleaner fuel to prevent the system from working more or harder than it needs to.
I apologize for quoting something I can't backup at this time. I just wish we could go back to not having emissions because the added heat load put on the engine only shortens the life span of it. Tractors today will not last like the old ones still are.
At the end of the day, it's your tractor and you can run whatever fuel you see fit.
 

DB-n-VA

New member

Equipment
L4060HST, open station with T-N-T kit.
Oct 5, 2021
13
13
3
Central Virginia
So I'm responding to a previous comment I made regarding fuel. I stated it was in the Operator's Manual but it's actually stated in the Workshop Manual. I know I read it somewhere. Bottom pic clearly states ULSD ONLY. This only applies to tractors that have emissions.



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